- THAT is the point, I know little about it and was guiding the people from O365 who purport to know it inside out. I don't know anything about it, but can read a warning sign when it comes up (which is apparently more than the O365 people could).
- Your assumption is incorrect - No one set it up at our end - it was set up by the O365 people, but didn't work and THEY had to then fiddle with it and still don't have it working properly.
You seem to be very good at living in the land of perfect Office 365, not so good a taking on-board factual accounts of problems with the service - instead wishing to portray the users as, well, what is your suggesting? We are liars, we are responsible for something we didn't sell or set up? Our complaints are invalid because they don't match your wish to portray the service as usable?
What nonsense you talk, you have now dreamt up a scenario that didn't even happen to back up your comments. Our planning was to consult with O365 BEFORE going anywhere near it - they dug it into the hole and are now unable to get it out - which I think is the point being made here that you don't want to hear.
In your opening post you implied it was you who set things up, and your questions thereafter strengthened the position that you were in some way responsible for the situation you found yourself in. I thought about apologising for the misunderstanding, but I decided not to given your subsequent comments.
Thus I was answering based on the information YOU provided. Hardly surprising then I answered in the way I did - and as for my comments, some I will withdraw within the context of the misunderstanding, but not all.
The accounts you have given are sparse and without in-depth detail. ALL of your posts implied your involvement, and that you went to others for help AFTER the event.
Noted that you feel I 'talk' nonsense. In context, I would disagree; I answered based on the details you'd provided.
Here's some facts for you.
I've worked in IT for over 30 years. I have helped hundreds of businesses, globally, with IT Consultancy, on the ground work, support, networking, security, infrastructure and many other aspects.
I do NOT live in any perfect world of O365. I work in IT. I know from experience it is far from perfect.
Many business users are, in the main, clueless. Utterly. That's why I do what I do. It's why I am very good at what I do, because I am not clueless, and I don't talk nonsense. I help people. But It's also why I don't fly commercial airliners, because I am clueless as to how to do that, or fix cars, I am also clueless with that skill too. But what I DO know, is to not start something over which I am clueless. I have no desire to be at the bottom of a very big hole that I dug.
It seems to me that you have been talking to the wrong people. Who have you actually been talking too, out of interest? And if you say "O365", I will walk away, because O365 isn't an organisation, or a team, it is a product. If you have been talking to Microsoft themselves, that was also a big mistake, but not your fault. You should employ a partner, an MSP or Consultant, someone who deals with this stuff on a 24/7/365 basis, someone who could understand your business at the coal face.
If you want to talk facts, provide details. If you want to listen to a certain individual in this forum about products that they really shouldn't be getting involved with, or don't understand, please do. That persons advice thus far is the real nonsense here. At a personal level, infuriatingly so. Perhaps my frustration at another individuals response was reflected in my responses to you.
Let me just say, web designers design. And in some cases, it seems, not very well. It is highly unlikely they'll have had the right exposure to offer advice on products about which they know so little.
O365, as I said, is an amazing business tool that can transform the workflow for business. It is however one of many, and all options should be explored. It is neither a monster, nor confusing.
I'm 100% satisfied my advice is not nonsensical in any way. If you choose to take it, or not, is up to you. I'm here offering my advice for free, remember that.