Log into the Azure portal. Select All services > Management + governance. Select Management Groups. Select + Add management group. Leave Create new selected and fill in the management group ID field. The Management Group ID is the directory unique identifier that is used to submit commands on this management group. This identifier isn’t editable after creation as it’s used …
Configure Azure AD role settings in Privileged Identity Management Sign in to Azure portal with a user in the Privileged Role Administrator role. Open Azure AD Privileged Identity Management > Azure AD roles > Role settings. Select the role whose settings you want to configure Select Edit to open the Role settings page. On the Role setting pane for each …
Risky users With the information provided by the risky users report, administrators can find: Which users are at risk, have had risk remediated, or have had risk dismissed? Details about detections History of all risky sign-ins Risk history Administrators can then choose to take action on these events. Administrators can …
Sign in to the Azure portal as a global administrator, security administrator, or Conditional Access administrator. Browse to Azure Active Directory > Security > Conditional Access. Select New policy. Give your policy a name. We recommend that organizations create a meaningful standard for the names of their policies. Under Assignments, select Users and groups Under Include, select All users Under Exclude, select Users and …
Sign in to the Azure portal as a global administrator, security administrator, or Conditional Access administrator. Browse to Azure Active Directory > Security > Conditional Access. Select New policy. Give your policy a name. We recommend that organizations create a meaningful standard for the names of their policies. Under Assignments, select Users and groups Under Include, select All users. Under Exclude, select Users and …
Define locations Sign in to the Azure portal as a global administrator, security administrator, or Conditional Access administrator. Browse to Azure Active Directory > Security > Conditional Access > Named locations. Choose New location. Give your location a name. Choose IP ranges if you know the specific externally accessible IPv4 address ranges that make up that location or Countries/Regions. Provide the IP …
Sign in to the Azure portal as a Global administrator. Search for and select Azure Active Directory, then select Users > All users. Select Per-user MFA. A new page opens that displays the user state, as shown in the following example. Find the user you want to enable for per-user Azure AD Multi-Factor Authentication. You might need …
Sign in to the Azure portal with an account that’s been assigned the Global administrator, Guest, inviter, or User administrator role. Under Azure services, select Azure Active Directory (or use the search box to find and select Azure Active Directory). Under Manage, select Users. Select New guest user. On the New user page, select Invite user and then add the guest user’s …
Create a VM with Windows 2019 OS in Azure Install ADDS on the Windows Server Before you start installing Azure AD Connect, make sure to download Azure AD Connect Sign in as a local administrator to the server you wish to install Azure AD Connect on. You should do this on …
Make sure your have Windows 10 laptop or Windows 10 virtual machine created on Azure. You’ll need to create an Azure AD user if you don’t have it already created Right-click the Windows Start icon and select Settings to display Windows Settings options. Click on Accounts Select Access work or school > Connect. Sign in to Azure …
Sign in to the Azure portal. If you have access to multiple tenants, use the Directories + subscriptions filter in the top menu to switch to the tenant in which you want to register the application. Search for and select Azure Active Directory. Under Manage, select App registrations > New registration. Enter a display Name for your application. Users of …
Sign in to the Azure portal Select Azure Active Directory > Roles and administrators to see the list of all available roles. Select a role to see its assignments. To help you find the role you need, use Add filters to filter the roles. Select Add assignments and then select the users you want to assign to this …
Sign in to the Azure Portal with an account that is in the Global administrator. Search for and select Groups. Select All groups, and select New group. On the Group page, enter a name and description for the new group. Select a Membership type for either users or devices, and then select Add dynamic query. The rule builder supports …
Sign in to the Azure portal using a Global administrator account for the directory. Search for and select Azure Active Directory. On the Active Directory page, select Groups and then select New group. The New Group pane will appear and you must fill out the required information. Select a pre-defined Group type. Create and add a Group name. Choose a name that you’ll …
Sign in to your Azure AD organization with an account that is a User administrator in the organization. In Azure AD, select Users > Bulk create. On the Bulk create user page, select Download to receive a valid comma-separated values (CSV) file of user properties, and then add users you want to create. Open the CSV file and …
Sign in to the Azure portal using a Global administrator account for the directory. Search for and select Azure Active Directory from any page. Then select Custom domain names > Add custom domain In Custom domain name, enter your organization’s new name, in this example, contoso.com. Select Add domain. The unverified domain is added. The contoso.com page appears showing …
Sign in to the Azure portal Search for and select Azure Active Directory from any page. Select Users, and then select New user. On the User page, enter information for this user: Name. Required. The first and last name of the new user. For example, Mary Parker. User name. Required. The user name of the new user. For …
After you sign in to the Azure portal, you can create a new tenant for your organization. Your new tenant represents your organization and helps you to manage a specific instance of Microsoft cloud services for your internal and external users. Sign in to your organization’s Azure portal. From the Azure …