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All right, let's get to the show.
Hi. Welcome back to another episode of Teams On Air.
I'm your host Delanda Coleman
and today, I've brought a guest to talk
to us about content creation and
collaboration with Microsoft Teams powered by SharePoint.
And to do that, Mark Kashman.
>> Hello. Thanks for having me today.
>> Thanks for coming. How are you doing today?
>> Doing well, doing well. Let's dive
into this content centric world we live in.
>> I know. So tell me a little bit
about what you do here at Microsoft.
>> Yeah. So, I'm on the SharePoint Team.
I'm a Senior Product Manager,
and I focus a lot of what we do in the Cloud.
I think we all focus on what we're doing in the Cloud,
but I really focus on what we're
doing in the Cloud for the intranet.
Building out portals, different site types,
and then everything you do under that
as far as the pages,
news, lists, libraries, you name it.
>> How long have you been working
on the SharePoint product.
>> I've been on the SharePoint Team for about nine years.
>> Wow.
>> Before that I worked in the services
side of Microsoft, building
a solution on top of SharePoint,
SharePoint 2007 at that point.
And then before that, I was doing
field training with our enterprise sellers.
>> Amazing. So, you've been
working on SharePoint for a long time.
So, tell us how it's evolved over the last several years.
>> It's evolved a lot, and thanks to you,
it's continuing to evolve.
Really, it started out with it
being just an on-premises server,
and we had a small footprint initially when we started,
this is about 15 years ago.
And SharePoint as a server started to
add more and more capabilities to do sites,
to do search, to do social,
to do business intelligence.
You run the whole old SharePoint pie
and we really try to do it all.
But then, the world of Cloud came and there were
other areas where we could start to integrate,
or we made some acquisitions like
our fast acquisition for Search. So, we baked that in.
We bought Yammer as an acquisition.
Now that's a bit more of an integrated solution
both with inside SharePoint and across Office 365.
And now most recently,
you see this continued evolution where
we're starting to take parts and
pieces from a services perspective
to be the service that then gets
used in other applications,
just like House SharePoint
is used within Microsoft Teams.
>> Yeah, it's really become,
Microsoft Teams is, as we position it,
as the hub for teamwork.
And a big part of teamwork, obviously, is the content
that we co-author and collaborate on together.
So, thanks for helping us do that.
>> Absolutely. Yeah, you gave
this great chat space
where you can do all of your hub for teamwork.
And when it comes to content,
you want to make sure that that's stored,
managed in the right way,
but then has the added value of it's easy to share,
it's easy to co-author,
it's easy to version,
and that's a lot of what SharePoint
has been doing over the years.
And then go beyond that to have great experience
with when you want to communicate
both with the team, inside a team,
inside of Teams, when you want to
communicate across the company,
in something like Yammer,
or when you want to do some of
that direct targeted communication and email,
SharePoint is really there as a
content service to all of those.
And with the right use case,
it's really valuable to them,
have that be a single source
of content delivery for those different services.
>> That's cool. So, talk to me about what
happens when a Microsoft Teams channel is created.
What happens on the back-end with SharePoint?
>> Yes. So, we're really excited to be a part of
that whole Office 365
groups engine of what gets provisioned.
So when you created a teams in Team,
you get a SharePoint team site.
And as a part of the SharePoint team site,
there's some default things that
contribute to the Team Notebook,
obviously, there's a default
document library in Microsoft Teams,
that's the Files tab that's there for each channel.
And then just for clarity, any time you create
a new channel with inside a team,
that's effectively a folder with
inside that default document library.
And I'll show you all that when we get to demo.
>> Okay, great. Well, how
about we just jump right into the demo?
>> Sure. So, since we're
talking about the Files tab, we'll start there.
We've got a lot of surface area that we'll cover.
But if you look at here,
this is the main "Files" tab in
the General channel for our Strategy and Planning Team,
and they're working on things in
advance of before they get launched.
So, there are certainly
a lot of teamwork around getting things ready.
But if you'll look at this "General" tab, we're here,
but if I go up a level, you'll
really see it's the full document library.
And since we've got a couple of channels,
we're going to have a couple of folders that reflect
all of those different channels that we have.
So, there's a channel General,
there's a channel for Benefits,
there's a channel for Office Move,
then there's a few ones that we get created
uniquely based on different use.
So, this the full document library but for each channel,
when you're really focused on specific content,
you obviously really get that window into it.
>> That's great. So as a end user, if I'm used to
working in SharePoint and I'm
familiar with the SharePoint interface,
and for whatever reason, if I
want to go to SharePoint, I can see
the same content and files in
SharePoint and the file structure in SharePoint.
>> Exactly. And that's the complete value right there.
It's not two sets of files,
it's not two sets of how people
describe their files or organize them,
the team organizes their files in the way
that they best want to work together
and if that's a bunch of folders or
if it's just an open flat structure,
it'll replicate in from a view perspective
but not necessarily a replication
of files. So there are all the same files.
>> Okay, awesome. Cool.
>> So, if we go a little bit deeper
into the files experience,
I wanted to switch over and show you if you had
created another document library,
for a different use case,
this team has a lot of media that
they use in their different outreach internally,
when they get ready to launch, some of
these final assets then get moved
in to be published and finalized into the public.
So this is a completely new document library
in the team's site. It's just another document library
and here, we reference it very easily.
It's called the Media Library.
And here is that full media
library reference right there.
If we go back into the main files,
I want to show you one of the things that we have
that really was a SharePoint first feature,
but because of the integration where it really
pulls through the SharePoint richness,
it comes to Teams as well.
So, we're going to look at
a couple of different file types.
One is a GIF, and you'll see that we stay
within the user interface of Teams
but it really is going to bring up a GIF and so
we support 270 file types.
GIF's pretty easy. Another fun one here is if we look at
an X-ray, this is an X-ray of a- and we'll see it here.
Not my foot but somebody else's foot.
>> Oh, man.
>> So, really seeing these rich previews.
Not just small thumbnails
but when you actually go into
the content, before you commit to it,
especially if it's something that
you think you've got the right title,
you think you've found what you're looking for.
I can stay right here in
the context of what I'm working on,
and then really nice is if you go into,
let's go into this fun one,
it will show you kind of the full power of the viewers,
and how that then accrues into the value of Teams,
that experience with the files.
This is actually loading a 3D object,
that if I touch the screen and spin it around,
it's just fun to see but certainly,
it's really valuable to be able to
reference that right in line with the discussion
and to continue work without
having to launch this or go somewhere else to find it.
>> Right, yeah. This is
a fantastic feature for designers.
And one thing you didn't touch upon but I really love to
emphasize for our audiences that
you can also start conversations on these.
So, not only the Office and Word, PowerPoint,
Excel documents you can comment on,
but you can also comment on
all these different file types.
>> That's right. So you're going
here and start a conversation,
which starts the conversation
just for the team on this particular lesson.
There could be a similar asset that's
spoken or having a discussion around with other teams,
and this chat will be just for this particular team.
>> Awesome.
>> And I'll show you that when we get to talking
about list, pages and news. It's really nice.
The user interface that Teams offers to be
able to hold that conversation around the content,
specific to just what the team is chatting about.
>> Right. Wow.
>> So the other thing,
just to see what these files look like.
I wanted to show you on the desktop.
All of these files are also be able to
sync these down to the desktop.
So, if I'm on Windows or Mac,
I can use the OneDrive sync client to sync these files.
So, to most people using them they'll be
within the Microsoft Teams' user interface,
or like you said they might be in SharePoint, it's okay.
But when it comes to syncing those
files and taking them offline,
again, 270 file types
or whatever files you have in there
will come offline and what you're
seeing here is that same set of files in
the main document library for Strategy and
Planning to be able to then take my work with me,
even if I'm on the point with no connectivity.
>> Yeah. I was just about to mention that.
Quite often, I go on the plane
and I do get Internet access
but it's slow as I don't know what.
And so having the capability
of being able to sync my files offline,
work on them, and as soon
as I'm connected to the Internet,
they'll sync, that's fantastic.
>> Yeah, the value of co-authoring
or in almost real time or near time,
authoring with other people and
having that accrue even if you're offline,
doesn't stop when you're using Teams.
>> This is so cool. Thank you.
>> Yeah. So, let's continue. Sort of our two are here.
One of the other things, just from a files perspective
and then we'll get into some of the other content types,
is of course the ability to take a single file.
It doesn't matter what type of file it is,
and reference that has a tab of its
own. So, this is a handbook.
This might be something that the Strategy and
Planning Team has for every new employee to reference,
or just something that has
guidelines that they might want
to reference to see what are the ways that they do work.
And here it is, a nice full fidelity to be
able to go directly into the Word document.
And to go to the document library,
go into a folder and open up the document.
But present it here, because it's
an important document that
they've reference all the time.
>> Right.
>> So that's Files.
If we switch over, and we actually look at, what
does it look like to see more of a rich dashboard?
In SharePoint, we talk about these
as pages or news articles.
And the first one I'm going to show you here is
sort of in the context of a Q1 Report.
Imagine this will live around for a couple of months.
And then in the next quarter,
we'll have another tab or replace it with Q2 Reports.
So, I'm here and I want to review
what it is in this report.
So instead of having multiple tabs that I go to,
you might use SharePoint to build out a whole page,
like a mini dashboard,
and here's a mini dashboard for quarterly reports.
And on it, we have, of course, title,
below the title we maybe have
an embedded PowerPoint that's here on the left-hand side.
On the right-hand side or sort of the report outlets,
this is actually an embedded Excel file.
As we go down the page,
you might have some things that are actually being
auto rolled up by our Search Web Part,
but it really is to represent
only a certain subset of content here of program.
So, it just shows Q1 Reports that
have to be the Word document file,
because that's what we did them in.
But then over here, to give you
an experience of what
this is to actually be an integrated experience,
this is actually pulling from Microsoft's stream,
a video that was a TownHall about the Q1 Reports,
and this is a fully functioning video
to not only be able to watch it,
but to be able to do some of the higher-end features
that Microsoft's stream gives us.
And there's a fun element that's within
this that I'm going to do a deep search and
it's going to find that exact
spot as what I searched for.
So, that's a lot of the riches.
The other thing you can see here is at the bottom,
we've got a good people experience.
And you have a great people
experience as well when you think about it
hierarchically from this perspective.
Through Q1 Reports, this is really targeting,
who are those subject matter
experts that we want to reference?
And in the page, like the mini dashboard, here is CJ,
if I hover over Andy.
And I can go in and learn a lot
more about them right here in line.
Who do they report to, what work are they working on,
how can I contact and those kinds of things.
And these people experiences are getting
richer and richer throughout the suite
but it's really nice to see it pull through here
right in the Microsoft Teams experience.
One other thing that I want to show here, like you said,
we're in this massive experience,
but right alongside you can have a chat.
So this is a full page in
SharePoint that you're going to have a chat here
and teams, and we'll just do
the quick hello and just get this done. And right
there, I'm having a really unique chat with
my team in the specific channel
referencing the Q1 Report.
>> That's awesome. And you can also @mention
the team so they'll get
a notification that this has popped up.
And so this is a great way for teams that have
status reports and rather than
having a meeting about the status report,
you can pin this to
the Channels tab and
whoever is creating this status report
can have a real time or near
real time report that anyone can go and look at.
>> There's a lot of ways you can get to this report.
And like you said, if you @mention somebody,
it's going to be a call for them to reply to
that or at least react to it. And when they
go to it, they're not going to get
punted out to a web browser or they're not
going to be forced to get out of
the context of where
their eyes are and where they're working.
And so, to be able to go from a discussion, just in
the channel has no concept of the Q1 Report yet,
when somebody clicks on it and then they're writing here.
Especially, if they want to add to the chat, they can
do it while they're referencing side by side.
>> Yeah. This is such a rich tool
and use case for
Teams is just how to be more collaborative,
how to be more communicative and how to be more open and
transparent about all the things
that it's easier to be discoverable.
>> Yeah. And that's exactly what we mean.
We want that full experience to come into
play and not only is it I'm just viewing the content,
but I'm actually interacting with it
and then beyond interacting with it,
I'm engaging with my team about it.
>> Awesome. All right.
So I know you have more to show us so let's go.
>> We got a new feature that's coming out.
It's already turned on. But I'll
show you how I turned it on.
So anytime somebody publishes
a news article like the Q1 Report we saw there,
and I can show you a few others if we have time.
But any time somebody publishes news,
which is kind of a special type of content in SharePoint,
it's going to get published and go
to a couple of end points.
It's going to go to the SharePoint Home,
which I'll show you to start up new piece of
news, but also goes to the SharePoint app.
We've got a News tab within there,
but of course it'll come here as it's relevant to a team.
All that news that's getting created on
the team's site will flow right into and if you want,
start new threads that people can then talk about.
But it'll happen automatically.
So I already have this one configured
and it's called SharePoint News,
just like all the other connectors that you offer.
Once you turn it on and add it,
you configure it essentially to
anything that flows from that team's site.
And now if we go back into the conversations,
you can see the one that I published not too long ago
which is called Big Features Come to New Programs,
just like when we were looking at the Q1 Reports.
That's a page in SharePoint and of
course, you can see here it automatically did that.
It comes and it's posted from
SharePoint News and now,
I can go and actively start replying,
mentioning, doing the fun mean stuff
like great article or something like that.
But let me take a step back and I want to show
you how that news gets there.
So then we go back in
SharePoint land, just for a second here,
and you start from
SharePoint Home and I'm going to create
a really simple news article just for the sake of time.
But from SharePoint Home, I can
go and create a news article.
Here's that team site we've been
working in, Strategy and Planning.
And then that's going to go in and take me right
into authoring the new news article.
And then choose a quick graphic here.
You tell me if you see one,
we'll just pull it from Bing, because
now we support Bing.
So once it's in place, you can do a number of
different things as far as
adjusting where the eye-line is.
And then we'll add something that just
kind of adds a lot of content pretty quickly,
which is using our Content Search
or Highlighted content web-part.
You can add images, you can add Bing maps,
you can do a whole bunch of stuff
but just to get there a little bit quicker,
we're going to click "Publish" and
then from a SharePoint perspective,
you can see here's our new article.
And now, it's starting to go out into
the news service I mentioned to the different endpoints.
But if we switch back to
our Microsoft Teams' user interface. What's there?
>> There's a new message.
>> A new message. So when you got the connector
working and somebody actually publishes a news article,
there it is, in pretty real time, after I published it.
It can automatically start a thread
for people to discuss,
share and bring other people
in with their thoughts and ideas.
>> That's so great. So if I went on a trip and
I wanted to make a summary and share that with my team,
I can go to SharePoint, create
a news article and then it automatically
gets posted to the associated team.
>> Yeah. And you can create
a really well oriented lots of media,
lots of different sections and layouts like you saw in
the Q1 Report or like you
said on the go from your mobile phone,
you can create news,
grab an image, maybe you're watching
a presenter announce a big piece of news or something.
You've got some thoughts, a bulleted
list, something like that.
You can attach a document and when you publish
that from your phone with the news connector connected,
it'll just show up and the rest of
the team, even if they're not at
the conference, can share and start to think about, 'Oh,
if Dalana thought it was a good idea,
well it was a good enough idea to make news.
Let's continue to talk about it."
>> I usually agree with that.
>> So, two last things, if we've got time
they're pretty quick.
>> Yeah. We have plenty of time.
>> So if you go in, just like you've been seeing.
I'm going to click through a couple of
other news articles that I've got already programmed.
But to add a news article or a page as
a single tab like you saw with
the Q1 Report, you would just go in,
select the "SharePoint" tab
and then bring it in here. And the couple
that I have, just to show you a couple of
examples are full pages.
This is a pretty rich article,
it's actually a page on the Where We Travel site.
And as I scroll up,
you'll see we've got an embedded Bing image,
we can support tables.
Here's a list of documents and if we get some of
these images that actually have
multiple images that you scroll through,
all this content is stored in
SharePoint including the documents,
including the images, the reference to Bing
is just storing where do we want the Bing map to show.
And it's all something that then
you could easily create these.
This is not a designer or a developer creative page,
this is you and me just creating the news that we want to
share with our team or more broadly across the company.
And you can see the ability to again
support embedding a full video.
So if I go into one word just to
kind of show you some of the formatting again,
if you treat this not just
as a single document but as more of
an info rich mini little mini dashboard,
again go into the full area.
You can lay out the content however you want
full width, three sections.
And you can highlight a lot of
different content and bring that through.
So those are a few examples.
If you add a news or
page directly in as a tab of its own.
The last thing I wanted to show you is
a huge thing that people have been using for
years with SharePoint which is SharePoint Lists.
And we want to make sure that when
somebody brings in a list,
they bring it in with the full fidelity
and the usability of a list.
So again, I'm going to go full note here so we
can see all aspects of the list.
I'm still in the Microsoft Teams' user interface.
>> Right, you haven't left.
>> I'm a member of this team, I haven't left.
>> You still will never have.
>> And to do this, I just grab the URL
of the list and I plug it in as a new tab.
But if you see one of
the things that disappears and it's really
a pervasive way we bring content into Teams,
is we take a lot of the crumb away,
you don't see the Office 365 app launcher or some of
that top navigation and
you don't see the left hand nav of the team site.
We want to focus on just the list so, here's the list.
But it's a very functional list.
And just to show you a few things
when you're in the List, you can,
if you want it to reorder it,
you'll see it looks a little bit more like
a staircase because we did smaller to larger.
We want to focus this down and filter only on things
that really maybe need
our attention which are things that are blocked.
So if I apply the filter on all the blocked items,
you'll see that we're minimizing that down and
then we remove this if I click on one particular item,
I could also see the full history of that item.
Who has touched it,
who has access to it.
Those kinds of rich information that you would
expect from a confident management system.
The last thing from a list perspective, if we clear this,
is we support views and we
have for a long time in SharePoint.
And within Microsoft Teams' user interface,
you can easily switch views.
So I'm going to go from seeing
all the blocked elements here to something that's more of
a program view to show me
all the things that are in progress or in review.
And you also see a lot of
our new formatting that's coming through.
So again full fidelity of
a full featured SharePoint List,
coming through very usable and referenceable right
in the context of where people
are talking about the items in the list.
>> Wow. That's pretty amazing.
You showed us a list, you can filter that list.
You can sort that list and then you
can also see the color coding
that you've built in automatically.
>> And these are things that are based on.
If it hits a certain how many efforts,
how many days or if it hits
a certain status it will change visually.
So you can always clear this and go right
back to all items and these things
change as people update their items or make
progress in workflow if
you'd programmed against a workflow.
But to see this all come through within the UI of Teams
is a lot of work that the SharePoint Team and
the Microsoft Teams have been doing as they collaborate,
to give a great end user experience,
but also to bring the richness
of why people use SharePoint
and give them more of a use why not to
go over to SharePoint if they don't need to.
>> That is a pretty amazing. Thanks, Mark for that demo.
Now let's take a quick break and go into a Teams Tip.
>> Hi, I'm Anne Michels.
Welcome to Teams Tips.
In this segment, I will give you
some quick and easy tips on how
to use Microsoft Teams more effectively.
One thing that I personally really love about Teams
is how easy it is to stay on top of
your chat messages and how easy you can truly ask them.
So, I am here in the "Chats" tab,
and with every message,
I have the option to favorite it.
When you favorite a chat,
that will pin that message to the top of
your list so that you always have it easily accessible.
Another option is to mute a chat.
When you mute a chat, that means that you will not
receive any notifications for that chat anymore.
And that is especially helpful
for those chats where there's a lot of
activity happening and you don't need to get
a notification every time there is a new message,
but you still want to be able to
go back to that message and read through it.
The third option that you have is to hide a chat.
When you hide a chat, that will remove
that chat from the list of your chats in the left.
But no worries, that chat is still there.
Whenever there is a new message,
it will pop up in your list again,
and you can also search for it.
And for those chats that
go into a direction where you're not
interested anymore and you
really want to leave that chat,
we have that option for you, of course, as well.
That's it for today, for more Teams Tips,
follow us on Twitter #TeamsTips.
>> All right. I hope you enjoyed that Teams Tip.
Welcome back, and now let's get back
into SharePoint and Microsoft Teams.
Before you leave us today,
I'd like to get understanding of
the future of Teams and SharePoint.
Can you share a little bit
about what's happening in the future?
>> Yeah, the future is bright.
There's a lot that the teams are working on,
both the SharePoint Team,
the Microsoft Teams team,
are really working together.
Hopefully, as you saw today, they're
making really great progress.
But they want that full fidelity to be able to
come through into the files experience.
Today, when you go to SharePoint,
there's some additional capabilities you
can pin documents to the top.
We talked about the different
content types in the previewers,
there's a nice tile layout that shows through it.
Before you really even commit to opening,
you'll see the full richness of the file.
So, a lot of those things are going to come,
they're going to continue to make that
files experience even better,
same as with what you saw with the list,
we want that top experience to be within Teams.
A feature that you've recently released,
we're starting to take a little bit more advantage of,
which is the external guest.
To being able to bring guests into Teams. It
also means that you have then guests in SharePoint.
And so we want to make that crossover of
a guest experience in Teams to be
able to then be a similar experience if not the
same when they're working in SharePoint.
So, just enabling guests across
the whole suite from an app to app perspective,
we're definitely excited about guests in general.
And the last thing is when you go to add content into
the Microsoft Teams at
channel level or across multiple channels,
we want to make that super easy.
Today it might be a few clicks, grab URL,
we want to actually be more radio buttons with
pages that come up based on what's available to you.
You can always program via URL,
grab any URL and put it in as a tab.
But we want to make sure that if you're
adding news, you're adding a list,
if you're adding an item within SharePoint,
that it's really click the tab to add,
choose radio button because you have
a list of items that are available to you.
>> All right. Fantastic.
Now, I know that there are lots of
SharePoint fans, so many
that you in fact have a conference.
Talk to us a little bit about the SharePoint conference.
>> Yeah. So, you asked about the history of SharePoint.
There has been a SharePoint conference
for many years, in 2007,
2009, 2011, and they've always gotten bigger and bigger.
Last one just before Ignite started,
was around 12,000 people.
>> Wow.
>> So, they're kind of a great
and crazy in a good way community.
As I see, your growing your community
as well and it's a great increasing community.
I've seen a lot of the activity in
Microsoft technology community, the community site,
but the SharePoint conference
is a way to bring everybody to
be super focused on what
you want to accomplish with SharePoint.
And we've been talking a lot about
what's going on in the Cloud.
We'll have a big focus of
what's going on-prem, we've got
a big server release coming with SharePoint Server 2019,
we'll share more details there,
all the integrations, you will have the Teams team,
we'll have about six or seven sessions
to share more about what's coming,
to share more about best practices,
to kind of reiterate some of
the things that we talked about here today.
And it's also just a great place
for the community to get together.
There's a lot of events in the morning,
midday, sessions, workshops,
just a whole host of people both people who are
very new to SharePoint to people who have
been around for a very long time.
And we always host a lot of our MVPs.
So, for Microsoft, there will be about a hundred people
coming in that are experts and revolve around SharePoint,
and with MVPs, we'll have about 60 to 80
the MVPs who focus on those same areas.
So, it'll be a big time in Vegas, May 21st to the 23rd,
definitely register,
join us, it's going to be a great time.
>> Yeah, definitely.
If you want to check it out, make sure
you go to SharePointNA.com.
All right, before you go,
I have a couple of questions for you from
our audience members and they would like to know,
first question, do you use
Microsoft Teams or SharePoint team sites?
>> So, hopefully with the demo that you just saw,
you see it's not an either or, it's an and.
So, we think of it as deep integration between the two,
where you manage and store your content,
where you maybe build out your rich layers and pages,
to then present in
Microsoft Teams, to hold the discussion around it.
That's where it's an and. SharePoint is where
you manage your content and Teams is
where you chat about it as in a hub for teamwork.
So, we don't see it as an either or.
A lot of people ask when do I use what,
and we think it's a combination of both.
And we're trying to give you that best user experience
to keep you very focused.
>> Awesome. Second question that I have is will
a team members have to switch back
and forth between Teams and SharePoint?
>> No, and a lot of times you think
about it as that 30/70 rule.
Some people might be working on the content but
a lot of people are more in the consumption role,
so you might have a few people who start in SharePoint.
But for the most part, they're going to
go into Teams and stay in Teams.
So, it's not a lot of switching
back and forth. And really, that's
the whole point of a lot
of the work that the teams are doing.
So that's right there in the context of your work,
you see the content right next to the context.
>> Okay, and the last question that I have,
is this a full SharePoint experience
and feature set in Teams?
>> It is. Really, the team is wanting to make it so
the same controls or
the same experience that you would
have or have had in SharePoint for a while
is no different when you go into Teams.
So today, we talked about there's that little delta of
the Files tab to the whole document library,
but pretty soon it'll just be a one to one experience.
If you know how to work with files inside of Office 365,
if you go up to that level,
you'll know how to work with
them within Microsoft Teams,
you'll know how to work with them in OneDrive,
you'll know how to work with them in SharePoint,
because that working with documents,
working with lists working with
pages and news is going to
be an innate way and really, it'll be the same experience.
>> Okay.
>> And we're working as hard as we can to make that true.
>> Okay. Thanks, Mark.
>> You're welcome.
>> You've given us a really rich and deep overview
of working with SharePoint and Microsoft Teams,
and the other thing that I want to emphasize is just
how Office or Office 365 customers can get
the full value of their subscription
using Microsoft Teams because we bring
all these experiences like SharePoint and
Exchange and et cetera into the experience.
Thank you so much for a wonderful demo and
overview of Teams and SharePoint working better together.
>> Yeah, thanks for having me. Thanks for letting me
share a little bit of the SharePoint site
and thanks for all the work that you all
do in the Microsoft Teams side.
>> All right guys,
that's it for this week's episode.
We'll see you in two weeks.
