1 00:00:00,700 --> 00:00:07,270 If you want to migrate all of your e-mail to 365, it can be done, it can be done quite easily. 2 00:00:07,930 --> 00:00:13,150 We do migrations all the time and we've done migrations from almost every mail platform you can name. 3 00:00:13,840 --> 00:00:18,570 So the first step in migrating your email, assuming you're getting e-mail somewhere else, you get 4 00:00:18,570 --> 00:00:20,260 to know where the domain is registered. 5 00:00:20,800 --> 00:00:26,200 You get to know where it's posted so your domain could be registered with GoDaddy. 6 00:00:26,950 --> 00:00:28,410 And maybe they're hosting your e-mail. 7 00:00:28,570 --> 00:00:29,860 Well, go, Daddy. 8 00:00:29,890 --> 00:00:36,310 Email is the pop and I map email, which is the oldest technology is known and they just don't have 9 00:00:36,310 --> 00:00:38,370 everything that we have here in 365. 10 00:00:38,440 --> 00:00:42,040 So most people migrate off of that onto a tenant like this. 11 00:00:42,640 --> 00:00:46,360 So you get an own where it's registered and you going to know where the email was hosted. 12 00:00:46,900 --> 00:00:52,240 It might be that on premise, meaning in your organization, you have a physical email server. 13 00:00:52,250 --> 00:00:53,590 It's called an exchange server. 14 00:00:54,160 --> 00:00:55,690 There's lots of other servers, too. 15 00:00:55,930 --> 00:00:57,700 We actually just did the notes migration. 16 00:00:58,030 --> 00:01:01,630 I didn't know there were any notes servers still out there alive, but there was. 17 00:01:02,140 --> 00:01:06,100 So if it's in-house, you got to know what kind of server it is, how old it is. 18 00:01:06,760 --> 00:01:07,720 How are you going to manage it? 19 00:01:07,780 --> 00:01:09,250 You need its admin password. 20 00:01:10,120 --> 00:01:14,440 If you're going to do a domain wide migration, you need the administrator password for the entire domain 21 00:01:14,740 --> 00:01:16,660 and it'll bring all your mailboxes over. 22 00:01:17,200 --> 00:01:21,610 If you're just doing certain users, then migrations can be done one by one. 23 00:01:22,240 --> 00:01:26,860 And that just means you actually need the users log in credentials in order to get that done. 24 00:01:28,000 --> 00:01:30,580 So the terms is a review to know that will help you. 25 00:01:30,940 --> 00:01:35,350 Is your registrar where your domain is paid for, where it's bought? 26 00:01:35,470 --> 00:01:37,490 Again, they take it away if you don't pay it. 27 00:01:37,540 --> 00:01:38,950 So whatever. 28 00:01:39,220 --> 00:01:41,920 And accept records those your email exchange your records. 29 00:01:41,980 --> 00:01:45,130 Those are DNS with your mail settings. 30 00:01:45,430 --> 00:01:50,140 So where you're coming from, where you're going to be also something called the PSTN file. 31 00:01:50,170 --> 00:01:57,160 Sometimes migrations are easiest done when you open up Outlook and you export all of your email to something 32 00:01:57,160 --> 00:02:04,330 called a PSV and then you create a new email profile, you flip your email to 365 and then you import 33 00:02:04,510 --> 00:02:05,560 that PSC file. 34 00:02:06,040 --> 00:02:08,710 So it's kind of a backup file of email. 35 00:02:08,720 --> 00:02:10,390 Persay works quite well. 36 00:02:11,560 --> 00:02:12,790 Which method do you use? 37 00:02:13,180 --> 00:02:18,730 It really depends on your technical ability, whether or not you've got help like an I.T. firm. 38 00:02:19,900 --> 00:02:22,990 It is based on how many accounts. 39 00:02:23,020 --> 00:02:24,580 If it's just one account, that's nothing. 40 00:02:24,580 --> 00:02:25,810 If it's a thousand accounts. 41 00:02:26,110 --> 00:02:27,970 We probably bring in third party software. 42 00:02:27,970 --> 00:02:30,230 So there's a lot of considerations. 43 00:02:30,280 --> 00:02:32,830 But the good news is it all can be done.