
If you’ve already got a tenant, skip ahead. Start by visiting the Microsoft Store for Business and signing in to your tenant OR signing up for a new tenant and store account. Generally, I try to avoid screenshot-heavy how-to’s like this, but since the docs for the Store haven’t been updated since 2017, I decided that I’d make an exception. Regardless, you are looking for a link in the store to allow you to create a new Azure tenant. There used to be an link on the Business Store home page to create a new store, but I can’t seem to find a working link any more so the steps I list today (May 2019) may not be accurate for long. If you don’t already have an Azure AD Tenant, you can create the tenant and sign up for the Microsoft Store for Business all at the same time. Signing up for the Microsoft Store for Business I will also attempt to highlight any steps that will incur costs within Azure, though most of what I’ll cover is free. I will be linking to their instructions for some steps, while highlighting some of the key points and lessons learned with it and to hopefully put you on the path to using the Microsoft Store for Business. While Microsoft has done great job documenting individual parts of this process, I had to jump all over to find everything. In this post, I’ll go over how to integrate the Microsoft Store for Business into your ConfigMgr console and review the various ways to deploy these apps from ConfigMgr. In a previous post I described how to deploy applications to users using Active Directory (AD) security groups as direct members of ConfigMgr collections.


Windows 10 Feature Updates – The Challenge of Servicing in the Enterprise.Windows 10 Feature Updates – Leveraging SetupDiag for Better Reporting.Demystifying Windows 10 Feature Update Blocks.
