Sponsored By

Microsoft Teams Capabilities Continue to ExpandMicrosoft Teams Capabilities Continue to Expand

Step by step, Microsoft works to evolve Teams into the ultimate collaboration hub.

Kevin Kieller

January 29, 2018

3 Min Read
No Jitter logo in a gray background | No Jitter

Today, Microsoft announced several enhancements to its Teams product, calling it "the biggest single release of new functionality since Teams launched last March."

None of the capabilities announced focused on real-time communications or meetings. I'm not too surprised because I'm expecting Microsoft to save these announcements until March at Enterprise Connect 2018 in Orlando.

Instead, today's announcements focused on enhancing Teams as a "hub" that combines and exposes capabilities from other applications -- both Office 365 applications and many third-party applications -- and enabling "slash" (/) and "at" (@) commands to take quick actions and query and execute actions in other apps. Slash commands borrow ideas already incorporated in Slack, while @ commands seem to go further than what is possible today in Slack. With @commands, Microsoft says "you can search for information in an app, such as a news article or an image in Adobe Creative Cloud, and easily insert a specific result into a chat or channel conversation."

These enhancements continue to drive toward a future vision where Teams becomes the client interface in which most end-users spend their day. Currently many office workers "live" in the Outlook inbox and calendar. Teams is moving to support a possible collaboration and teams-based future, by enabling teams of many different types to launch Teams at the start of their day and continue accessing all they need to from within Teams until the end of their work day, including calls, meetings and instant messages.

Additionally, a newly announced "Who" application capability allows you to search for people within your organization based on name or topic area. This feature leverages the Office Graph, a specialized list of the content and people important to you based on your previous interactions.

And, an improved Teams app store makes it easier to discover applications you may want to embed into Teams, either for your own personal use or within a channel.

As has been predicted by myself and many of my wise colleagues, voice and other real-time communications are likely to become embedded directly into line of business applications. And indeed, in this future world Teams is creating, collaboration takes center stage, with voice communications relegated to simply one feature, a struggling actor playing a bit part. Further, line of business applications themselves also become embedded into Teams, alleviating the need to juggle separate communication stacks across separate applications.

Today's announcement seeks to move Teams further up the application stack, extending the idea that Teams aims to be both an overarching interactive interface and a workflow and collaboration platform.

My team and I help organizations predict and plan for the future, then deliver exceptional results in the present. Like, dislike, or want to respond to something above? Please comment below, send me a tweet @kkieller, or message me on LinkedIn. Better yet, register for Enterprise Connect 2018, then we can talk in person.

Enterprise Connect 2018 runs March 12 to 15, in Orlando, Fla. Register now using the code NOJITTER to save an additional $200 off the Early Bird Pricing or get a free Expo Plus pass.

About the Author

Kevin Kieller

Kevin Kieller is a globally recognized Unified Communications, Collaboration and technology analyst, strategist, and implementation leader. He is part analyst and part consultant, which ensures he understands both the "big picture" and the real-world realities.

Kevin and the team he created helps organizations select and successfully implement leading collaboration, communication and cloud technologies, focusing on delivering positive business outcomes. He helps vendors generate awareness and demand, position their products, often leveraging his unique understanding of the Microsoft ecosystem.

Kevin leads the elite BC Strategies Expert group and is part of the No Jitter technical analyst team where he covers Microsoft Teams, Copilot, UC, Collaboration, and AI for productivity. He presents regularly at Enterprise Connect and keynotes many other events focused on technology effectiveness.

He has led the development of many technology strategies for medium and large organizations, served as Bell Canada's lead UC strategist, developed new practice offerings for Softchoice, and advised hardware and software companies interested in expanding within, or competing against, the Microsoft ecosystem.

Kevin is comfortable interfacing at both the most senior (CxO) levels and getting "his hands dirty" helping technical teams.

Kevin has conceived, designed and overseen the development of software products and cloud-based services in the business, educational and recreational areas which have been used by millions of people in over 17 countries worldwide. A long time ago he created an award-winning game for the Commodore 64 and ever since has been committed to delivering business value through technology.