Viva Engage networks and Microsoft 365 tenants

To provide the best end-user and management experience, we require each Microsoft 365 tenant to be associated with a single Viva Engagement network. If you don't have this configuration, we strongly recommend that you consolidate previously migrated networks into a single primary network for your tenant. By doing this, you move Viva Engage into a supported state for your tenant, and prevent your networks from being automatically consolidated.

Note

Have you recently received a communication from Viva Engage stating that your Microsoft 365 tenant is associated with two or more Viva Engage networks? If you're wondering what that means, read this article for context, and the more detailed blog post from Viva Engage support for information about what actions you can take.

The changing role of Viva Engage network

A Viva Engage network represents people who are part of the same organization, and work together closely. A Viva Engage network acts as an organizational boundary and as a management entity. As Viva Engage becomes an integral part of Microsoft 365, Viva Engage uses the associated Microsoft 365 tenant as the organizational boundary and for managing key functions.

Viva Engage network as an organizational boundary Only users who are part of the same organization can join the network, which provides trust between members of the network, so they can collaborate freely.

As Viva Engage becomes an integral part of Microsoft 365, the organizational boundary for Viva Engage and Microsoft 365 become the same; all Microsoft 365 users who are part of the same Microsoft 365 tenant (with a Viva Engage subscription), can access Viva Engage.

When the organization grows, and a new domain is added to the Microsoft 365 tenant, that domain is automatically synchronized to Viva Engage, enabling users of that domain to readily access Viva Engage. Whenever you add a new domain to the Microsoft 365 tenant, that domain automatically synchronizes with Viva Engage so that users of the new domain can access Viva Engage.

Viva Engage network as a management entity All aspects of the Viva Engage service used to be managed at the network level, including identity, domain, and user management. As Viva Engage becomes an integral part of Microsoft 365, key aspects of the Viva Engage service are managed in Microsoft 365, including identity, domain, user, and license management. You get one common and powerful set of tools for Microsoft 365 administrators to manage all Microsoft 365 services, including Viva Engage. We recommend that Viva Engage Administrators only manage Viva Engage specific configurations (such as notification defaults or External network settings) at the network level.

How Viva Engage networks can be associated with Microsoft 365 tenants

Several customers adopted Viva Engage before it was closely integrated with Microsoft 365, which resulted in the following configurations.

One Microsoft 365 tenant associated with one Viva Engage network (one tenant: one network)

In this scenario, your Microsoft 365 tenant is associated with a single Viva Engage network. For example:

  • Verified domains on the Microsoft 365 tenant: contoso.onmicrosoft.com, contoso.com, fabrikam.com

  • Domains on Viva Engage network: contoso.onmicrosoft.com, contoso.com, fabrikam.com

How customers get into this configuration: Viva Engage is on by default in Microsoft 365. This means that when you create a new Microsoft 365 tenant, a new Viva Engage network is automatically created, and the domains from Microsoft 365 are added to Viva Engage. Also, as part of Viva Engage activation waves, we're activating Viva Engage for all tenants with a Microsoft 365 Viva Engage premium subscription. Whenever domains are added to or removed from the Microsoft 365 tenant, the domains continue to be synchronized with the Viva Engage network.

This configuration is the most common and recommended configuration. Key benefits of this configuration include:

  • Reduce Viva Engage administration cost: You can manage one single Viva Engage service, rather than managing individual Viva Engage networks.

  • Seamlessly manage Viva Engage from Microsoft 365: You can manage the Viva Engage service seamlessly from Microsoft 365, similar to how you would manage other Microsoft 365 services. For example, you can manage the lifecycle of all Viva Engage users centrally in Microsoft 365, and you can manage the lifecycle of Viva Engage domains from Microsoft 365.

  • Reduce information silos in your organization: Having a consolidated Viva Engage service that is shared by all your users, empowers them to connect and work with everyone in your organization.

This configuration supports the following capabilities related to managing Viva Engage in Microsoft 365.

Capability Support in 1 tenant: 1 network configuration
Sign-in
Yes
Single sign-on
Yes
User lifecycle management
Yes
Administrator lifecycle management
Yes
License management
Yes
Domain lifecycle management
Yes
Future Viva Engage-Microsoft 365 Groups Integration
Yes
Other future Viva Engage-Microsoft 365 integrations
Yes

Viva Engage-Microsoft 365 groups integration: Microsoft 365 connected groups are only available to customers in the 1 tenant: 1 network configuration.

Future Viva Engage-Microsoft 365 integrations: In the future, we may introduce other Viva Engage-Microsoft 365 integration features. These features are available to customers in the one tenant: one network configuration.

For information about managing your tenant in this configuration, see Manage Viva Engage domains across their lifecycle.

One Microsoft 365 tenant associated with many Viva Engage networks (one tenant: many networks)

In this scenario, your Microsoft 365 tenant associated with two or more Viva Engage networks. For example:

  • Verified domains on the Microsoft 365 tenant: contoso.onmicrosoft.com, contoso.com, fabrikam.com

  • Domains on Viva Engage network #1: contoso.onmicrosoft.com, contoso.com

  • Domains on Viva Engage network #2: fabrikam.com

How customers get into this configuration: Typically, this scenario is most common with large customers. A large organization (contoso.com) may have several subsidiaries (suppose fabrikam.com is one of them). While the organization itself has an official Microsoft 365 tenant and an official Viva Engage network (contoso.com network), users in the subsidiary companies may have independently signed up for their own Viva Engage networks with their own email domains (fabrikam.com network). Large companies may have tens of Viva Engage networks. Most of these subsidiary networks are lightly used or not used, most likely because they're separate from the more active larger network. We require that the organization consolidate these smaller networks into the larger parent network by performing network migration. Once consolidated, the organization can enjoy the previously listed key benefits for the one tenant: one network configuration.

Even after consolidation, you may be in a situation where due to strong business reasons, one Microsoft 365 tenant may need to connect with a few Viva Engage networks. This is not a supported configuration. Until you consolidate, you will experience the following limitations:

  • Increased Viva Engage administration cost: You have to manage multiple Viva Engage networks, thereby increasing the administration cost.

  • Inability to collaborate with everyone in the organization: All employees of your organization aren't on the same Viva Engage network, so users aren't able to connect with everyone in the organization using Viva Engage. For example:

    • Company-wide announcements: If the CEO of the company needs to communicate a message to everyone in the organization, they must do it in every network individually. Employee reactions to the announcement aren't available to everyone in the organization.

    • Organic information discovery: If employees in one network are working on a project and need to refer to a similar project in another subsidiary, they can't access it. Lack of access directly impacts organic collaboration.

  • Confusion caused due to organization boundaries being different in Viva Engage vs. Microsoft 365: In this configuration, the organizational boundary in Microsoft 365 is larger than the individual Viva Engage networks, causing potential confusion.

For example, a Microsoft 365 video may be shared with everyone in the organization. A contoso.com network user may comment on a Microsoft 365 Video, but this comment is only visible to other users in the contoso.com network. A fabrikam.com network user adds another comment similar to the one by the contoso.com user, but this comment isn't visible to the contoso.com user, because they're on different networks.

  • Viva Engage-Microsoft 365 groups integration not available: As announced in the Viva Engage blog, we're working on integrating Viva Engage groups with Microsoft 365 groups infrastructure. This feature isn't available to customers in the one tenant: many network configurations. Organizational boundaries between Microsoft 365 and Viva Engage can also cause this problem. Here's an example.

  • Group membership management: A company has integrated the Viva Engage groups with the Microsoft 365 groups infrastructure. A group is created in the contoso.com network that contains only users who can be part of the contoso.com network. When this integrated group is managed in Microsoft 365, a user with the fabrikam.com domain can be added to the group. Now this fabrikam.com user can't be added to the group in Viva Engage.

  • Future Viva Engage-Microsoft 365 integrations not available: In the future, we may introduce other Viva Engage-Microsoft 365 integration features. These features may not be available to customers in the one tenant: many networks configuration.

Here's a list of key capabilities (related to managing Viva Engage in Microsoft 365) that you can use in this configuration.

Capability In 1 tenant: many networks configuration
Sign-in
Yes
Single sign-on
Yes
User lifecycle management
Yes
Administrator lifecycle management
Yes
License management
Yes
Domain lifecycle management
Yes
Future Viva Engage-Microsoft 365 Groups Integration
No
Other future Viva Engage-Microsoft 365 integrations
No

Sign-in: Even when a Microsoft 365 tenant is associated with many Viva Engage networks, one Microsoft 365 user is associated with just one Viva Engage network. And when users access Viva Engage, they'll land in the right network.

  • Linda and John are users of the same Microsoft 365 tenant, but members of different networks. Suppose that linda@contoso.com tries to access Viva Engage - either by clicking on the Viva Engage tile or by logging in at www.Viva Engage.com. Linda will be prompted for their Microsoft 365 credentials, and will land on the contoso.com network. Similarly john@fabrikam.com can access Viva Engage, sign in with their Microsoft 365 credentials, and land on the fabrikam.com network. If Linda or John were Viva Engage users previously, their Microsoft 365 accounts are associated with that already existing Viva Engage user (no new user is created).

  • Dorena is a user of the Microsoft 365 tenant, with multiple emails that correspond to multiple networks. Suppose that Dorena tries to access Viva Engage using dorena@contoso.com. Dorena's primary email is dorena@contoso.com, but they also have a proxy email dorena@fabrikam.com. In this scenario, Dorena is prompted for their Microsoft 365 credentials, and lands on the contoso.com network. (Dorena is associated with just one of the Viva Engage networks.)

    • If the user's primary email matches a network, the user is logged in to that network.

    • Else, if the user's nonprimary email matches the network, the user is logged into that network. If there are more than one nonprimary email matches, one of them is chosen.

    • Else, if the user's UPN (User Principal Name, such as user@domain.com) matches the network, the user is logged in to that network

    • If this user was a Viva Engage user before, the Microsoft 365 account is associated with that already existing Viva Engage user (no new user is created).

      To access the other network, Dorena can do the following.

    • Get invited as a guest from the other fabrikam.com network. If both networks are configured to use the Enforce Microsoft 365 identity configuration, this option is the only option.

    • Create a new account in the other network, and sign in with email and password.

Once all users in the tenant can log in to the network with their Microsoft 365 accounts, you can manage the lifecycle of all users in Microsoft 365 and also set up Microsoft 365 single sign-on.

Administrator lifecycle management: Administrators who belong to the Microsoft 365 Global administrator role in the Microsoft 365 tenant will be added as Viva Engage Verified Administrators to the matching networks; after the Microsoft 365 Global administrator role is removed from their user account, they're no longer Verified Administrators on Viva Engage. In the example above, if a global admin has two emails, admin@contoso.com and admin@fabrikam.com, this administrator is added to both the contoso.com network and fabrikam.com network as Verified Administrator. But as explained in the Sign-in section, they can only sign in to one of the networks with their Microsoft 365 credentials.

Domain lifecycle management: When a Microsoft 365 tenant is associated with many Viva Engage networks, you can still manage Viva Engage domains across their lifecycle in Microsoft 365.

  • When a domain is added in Microsoft 365, it's added to the network that's designated as the primary network for domain lifecycle management. At the moment when Viva Engage is activated in the Microsoft 365 tenant, the network with the largest number of activated users is designated as the primary network for domain lifecycle management. Any new domains are added to the largest network. The .onmicrosoft.com domain on the Microsoft 365 tenant (the domain that can't be removed from the tenant) is added to this primary network.

  • When a domain is removed in Microsoft 365, it's removed from the corresponding network. If the domain is the last domain on the network, the network is disabled.

You have the following options to move to a one tenant: one network configuration:

  • Consolidate the smaller networks into the larger network by performing network migration. In the example above, do the following. First, ensure that Viva Engage is activated on your Microsoft 365 tenant. If you haven't done already, perform Viva Engage Enterprise activation and activate Viva Engage on the domain associated with the larger parent network (in this case, contoso.com). Then, navigate to the network migration section (that's part of Viva Engage administration pages) and migrate the smaller fabrikam.com network into the contoso.com network; you need to be a Viva Engage verified administrator and Global Administrator to do this operation. At the end, you'll reach the following state:

    Domains on the Microsoft 365 tenant Domains on the Viva Engage network
    Contoso.onmicrosoft.com
    Contoso.com
    Fabrikam.com
    Contoso.onmicrosoft.com
    Contoso.com
    Fabrikam.com
  • If the subsidiary has been fully assimilated with the parent organization, or has been spun off - the subsidiary company's domain can be removed from the Microsoft 365 tenant. In the example above, you would remove fabrikam.com from the Microsoft 365 tenant. At the end, you'll reach the following state:

    Domains on the Microsoft 365 tenant Domains on the Viva Engage network
    Contoso.onmicrosoft.com
    Contoso.com
    Contoso.onmicrosoft.com
    Contoso.com

Many Microsoft 365 tenants associated with one Viva Engage network (many tenants: one network)

You may have two or more Microsoft 365 tenants that are associated with a single Viva Engage network. For example:

  • Verified domains on the Microsoft 365 tenant1: contoso.onmicrosoft.com, contoso.com

  • Verified domains on the Microsoft 365 tenant2: fabrikam.onmicrosoft.com, fabrikam.com

  • Domains on Viva Engage network: contoso.com, fabrikam.com

How customers get into this configuration: Typically, large customers find themselves in this scenario. A large organization (contoso.com) could have several subsidiaries (say fabrikam.com is one of them). This organization has a Viva Engage network and may have added all the domains in the company to the Viva Engage network. While the organization itself has an official Microsoft 365 tenant, the subsidiary company may have independently created another Microsoft 365 tenant (fabrikam.com).

This is not a supported configuration. Only one of the tenants is associated with Microsoft 365 for management and sign-in. The following table shows the key capabilities related to managing Viva Engage in Microsoft 365 that are supported (or not) in this configuration.

Capability Support in many tenants: one network configuration Details
Sign-in
No
Users from only one of the Microsoft 365 tenants can sign in to Viva Engage with their Microsoft 365 sign-in. The first user that signs in using Microsoft 365 credentials determines which Microsoft 365 tenant gets associated with the Viva Engage network for sign-in.
Single sign-on
No
Since not all users can sign in to Viva Engage with their Microsoft 365 credentials, you can't Enforce Microsoft 365 identity in Viva Engage, and implement the Microsoft 365 based single sign-on solution. The Microsoft 365 based single sign-on solution can't be implemented in the many tenants: one network configuration.
User lifecycle management
No
User lifecycle can be managed only for users who can sign in to Viva Engage with their Microsoft 365 credentials. So, you can't manage all Viva Engage users across their life cycle in Microsoft 365.
Administrator lifecycle management
No
Only Global administrators of one of the tenants is added as Verified Administrators in Viva Engage. So, you can't manage the lifecycle of all Viva Engage administrators across their life cycle in Microsoft 365.
License management
No
Licenses can be managed only for users who can sign in to Viva Engage with their Microsoft 365 credentials. Also, since you can't Enforce Microsoft 365 identity, you can't block Microsoft 365 users without Viva Engage licenses.
Domain lifecycle management
No
This configuration isn't supported for domain lifecycle management, so you can't Manage Viva Engage domains across their lifecycle in Microsoft 365.
Consolidating free Viva Engage basic networks
Yes
You can sign in to Viva Engage, and consolidate Viva Engage basic network to the Microsoft 365 tenant that's associated with the Viva Engage network for management.
Future Viva Engage-Microsoft 365 Groups Integration
No
Other future Viva Engage-Microsoft 365 integrations
No

You have the following options to move out of this unsupported configuration:

  • Add all the relevant domains to one tenant using the Microsoft 365 admin center. In the example above, you ensure that both contoso.com and fabrikam.com are on the same tenant. At the end, you reach the following state:

    Domains on the Microsoft 365 tenant Domains on the Viva Engage network
    Contoso.onmicrosoft.com
    Contoso.com
    Fabrikam.com
    Contoso.onmicrosoft.com
    Contoso.com
    Fabrikam.com
  • Create separate Viva Engage networks, one per tenant. In the example above, you remove either contoso.com or fabrikam.com from the Viva Engage network, and create a new network with that domain. To remove Viva Engage domains from your network, contact the Viva Engage Support team. Before removing a domain from a network, delete all the user accounts containing that domain. If needed, these users can later be invited as guests from the newly created network. At the end, you reach the following state:

    Domains on the Microsoft 365 tenant1 Domains on the Viva Engage network
    Contoso.onmicrosoft.com
    Contoso.com
    Contoso.onmicrosoft.com
    Contoso.com
    Domains on the Microsoft 365 tenant2 Domains on the Viva Engage network
    Fabrikam.onmicrosoft.com
    Fabrikam.com
    Fabrikam.onmicrosoft.com
    Fabrikam.com

Even after you move into a one tenant: one network configuration, you may accidentally move back to a many tenants: one network configuration. Say, due to some reason the contoso.com network has another domain tailspin.com, which hasn't yet been added to the Microsoft 365 tenant. In this situation, a new Microsoft 365 tenant is created for tailspin.com. Now two tenants (contoso.com and tailspin.com) are connected to the same Viva Engage network. To avoid this situation, we recommend that you add all the domains in your Viva Engage network to your Microsoft 365 tenant. If you find yourself in this situation, use the previous guidance above to get back to the recommended one tenant: one network configuration and regain all the benefits.

FAQ

Q: One of our users is redirected to the wrong Viva Engage network.

A: This issue can occur if your network's in an unsupported configuration with one tenant and many Viva Engage networks. For more information, read about the One tenant: many Viva Engage networks scenario.

You can either consolidate your Viva Engage networks, or change the user's account, as explained in A Viva Engage user is displayed as former member when you use Microsoft 365 sign-in for Viva Engage.