5 tips for planning an Exchange Online migration
When I last left you, we were discussing the HAFNIUM attacks and the probable impacts an Exchange Online migration may have on your infrastructure, systems, and internal processes within your organization. If you missed part one about whether on-premises Exchange has become too risky, you can catch-up here.
MIGRATIONWEBINAR
Richard Dean
4/8/20211 min read
In my last blog, we were discussing the HAFNIUM attacks and the probable impacts an Exchange Online migration may have on your infrastructure, systems, and internal processes within your organization. If you missed part one about whether on-premises Exchange has become too risky, you can catch up here.
In this post, we are going to continue that conversation, assuming you are starting the planning process of an Exchange Online migration or a migration to Microsoft 365. We’ll talk about the secret sauce of planning and managing a successful enterprise migration project. I’ve dug into my Rolodex (do people still have those?) and called up some expert project managers, migration engineers and solution architects with years of experience, to bring you the top five tips for planning an Exchange Online migration
Retiring your Exchange on-premises mailboxes, public folders, and all the other interrelated systems can seem like an impossible task, but with the proper guidance, we will provide your organization with all the known benefits the cloud offers in security, scalability, and cost savings.