![enabling skype for business in office 365 powershell enabling skype for business in office 365 powershell](https://www.thelazyadministrator.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/02/home.png)
ENABLING SKYPE FOR BUSINESS IN OFFICE 365 POWERSHELL LICENSE
Retrieving a list of all users with E1 license **Note that the usage location cmdlet is Set-MsolUser Set-MsolUserLicense -UserPrincipalName -AddLicenses "reseller-account:STANDARDPACK" Set-MsolUser -UserPrincipalName -UsageLocation BM It can’t be assigned per user.Īssigning a usage location and E1 license to a user
![enabling skype for business in office 365 powershell enabling skype for business in office 365 powershell](https://mpears.com/assets/uploads/2019/01/PowerShell_SkypeOnlineConnector.png)
This app is assigned at the organization level. Success and Disabled is self-explanatory, while PendingProvisioning and PendingActivation is reflected in the follow 3 app entries with the same description: (Get-MsolUser -UserPrincipalName that this cmdlet will list all the Apps and their status. The following cmdlet allows us to obtain the Apps and their status for the specified user: Below is an example of what Apps are available when Office 365 E1 is assigned: Obtaining the enabled or disabled apps for the license assigned to a userĮach Office 365 license actually bundles a group of applications that can be enabled or disabled for a user. Product names and service plan identifiers for licensing Most of the names for these SKUs can be found at the following TechNet article: Case in point, STANDARDPACK is actually the name for Office 365 E1: The cmdlet to obtain the licenses available in the tenant is Get-MsolAccountSku and as the output below shows, the AccountSkuId name will not directly reflect what you see in the portal. Obtaining licenses available in the tenant What I ended up using was PowerShell for the assignments and thought it would be useful to share the PowerShell cmdlets for some common licensing tasks that may be useful for others.Īll of the cmdlets below require you to connect to the O365 tenant via Connect-MsolService cmdlet.
![enabling skype for business in office 365 powershell enabling skype for business in office 365 powershell](https://o365reports.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/Exchange-Online-PowerShell-cmdlets.png)
Using the Microsoft 365 admin center to perform this is possible but isn’t the most efficient method for large batches. I’ve recently had to perform a bit of licensing management for a client because they had a set of users who have Office 365 E1 licenses assigned but the Apps configured were inconsistent across the board.