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What’s new in Office 365 administration—October update

The new admin center reached general availability one month ago. This was a big milestone in our mission to provide you with a first-class admin experience, with tools that enable you to efficiently manage all aspects of the service. We continue to evolve the admin center. This month, we focused on providing you with additional usage insights, including new usage reports, the preview of the Office 365 adoption content pack in Power BI and more role-based permissions through a new Power BI admin role.

Here’s a summary of the October updates:

New usage reports starting to roll out today

In March, we launched the new reporting dashboard in the Office 365 admin center that makes it easier for you to efficiently monitor your service, identify issues, plan training and report back on the investment to your management. Today, we are happy to announce four new usage reports for active users, Email clients, Skype for Business clients and Office 365 Groups, that provide you with additional insights about how users in your organization are using and adopting Office 365.

Here’s a look at each report:

The image below shows all users that are licensed for one or more products and the last date they used any of those products. By clicking the Column icon, admins can modify the table to see which license has been assigned to a user, as well as when the license was assigned to the user.

You can find more information about the usage reports in the related support article.

Management enhancements—Power BI interactive reporting and Power BI admin role

To provide you with richer and more personalized usage insights, we’re combining the intelligence of the usage reports with the interactive reporting capabilities of Power BI. The new Office 365 adoption content pack lets you visualize and analyze Office 365 usage data, create custom reports to share the insights within your organization and pivot by attributes such as location and department. The adoption content pack will become available for all customers to opt-in in the coming months.

The new Power BI Service Administrator role can be assigned to users who should have access to the Power BI Admin Portal without also granting them other Office 365 administrative access. The Power BI Service Administrator role can currently be assigned through PowerShell and will come to the Office 365 admin center by the end of the year.

More to come

In the coming months, we will add more reports focused on Yammer Groups and clients used to access SharePoint, OneDrive for Business and Yammer.

We are also working on providing new public APIs that will enable you to programmatically access the usage data and integrate it into custom applications, like a company reporting portal.

The new service health dashboard—announced at Ignite—will start to roll out to First Release customers mid-November.

Let us know what you think!

Try the new features and provide feedback using the feedback link in the lower right corner of the admin center. And don’t be surprised if we respond to your feedback. We truly read every piece of feedback that we receive to make sure the Office 365 administration experience meets your needs.

—Anne Michels, @Anne_Michels, senior product marketing manager for the Office 365 Marketing team

Please note: the features mentioned in this blog post have started to roll out. If they are not available yet in your region, for your subscription, or for your organization, please check back in a few weeks!

The post What’s new in Office 365 administration—October update appeared first on Office Blogs.

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