Tenant-To-Tenant Migration architecture model (continued):
This is a continuation of the previous article on Migration
architecture models. Specifically, it focuses on Microsoft365 migration, tools,
and migration of on-premises tenants.
The Tenant-to-Tenant migration architecture model is one of
the popular ones among several architectural approaches towards tenant
management. A tenant-to-tenant migration can be single-event migration, phased
migration, or tenant move or split. These are also referred to as batched
migration or cutover migration.
In a single event migration, everything is migrated as a
single event. There is a higher risk and a shorter timeline. When there is no
strict organization and users wear multiple hats or belong to multiple project
teams, it becomes hard to segregate them into migration groups. A single event can be used to migrate all and
eliminate the need for coexistence considerations. The net benefit to the users
is that they keep their original email address. The drawback is that automation
might rely on APIs and there might be rate limits on their invocations.
Phased migration is the gradual migration of users, services,
and data. With separation into multiple migration groups, there is continuity
of access for users to their emails and meetings. There is lower risk and a
longer timeline. The only drawback is the coexistence limitation. Users will have an email address in a new
domain and a tool might be required to do the migration. A variety of third-party tools are available
from say Consulting Services to migrate Exchange mailboxes, public folders, SharePoint
sites, OneDrive folders, Office 365 groups, while users can help themselves
with native capabilities from Intune and Windows 10 such as for subscription
activation license. Native tools also have their place but they make calculation
for Total Cost of Ownership a bit tedious.
Since the migration tasks are complex, there may be many
activities occurring simultaneously such as migration of servers and other
infrastructures. Coordination to minimize effort and risk and to avoid overlap
is essential. Migration might not even be scheduled in certain periods. The
overall picture matters more for phased migrations. This warrants the use of an
overall plan where individual projects such as Exchange, SharePoint and Teams
workload migrations can be managed.
Talking to users is critical towards this purpose. Certain
business functions might not even be on the plan until that occurs. Even though
these might be limited in number, they matter to the overall migration.
Advanced reporting tools for large and complex projects or
periodic migrations can reduce stress because they anticipate common needs and
have lower maintenance than custom or ad hoc reporting. Reports also help
backwards in the planning process.
As with all projects of this nature, some discretion is
required between balancing migration with one or the other factors. Sometimes,
a single tool helps better than having teams onboard on multiple native tools.
Migration tools like BitTitan MigrationWiz for migrating
Microsoft 365, Exchange and G Suite as well as Fast Cloud File migrations for
SharePoint Data are also well-known. Mover.IO is a free migration manager from
Microsoft for work or school. These tools work very well for hybrid environment
and tenants. When doing the migration directly, it might be better to 1)
recreate the teams’ structure by adding users and permissions at the target
tenant, 2) migrate content from the associated SharePoint Sites and upload to
the target tenant, and 3. Export data from the Exchange mailboxes and import it
into the destination. A back-of-the-envelope calculation of the time and cost
would be helpful to this case.
No comments:
Post a Comment