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How Eradicating Bad Email Habits Improves Microsoft 365 Account Security

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Stop Password Sharing Now

ZDNet report described a number of bad security habits in small to medium companies, among which was the headline statistic that 22% of business leaders share their email passwords with co-workers or assistants.

Much of the success of Office 365 is fueled by small to medium businesses, who find it much easier to use cloud services than to deploy their own Exchange and SharePoint servers (a point underlined by attacks on on-premises Exchange servers) . I hope that 22% of business leaders who use Office 365 don’t share their passwords. It’s old-school thinking that doesn’t reflect the reality of today. Sharing passwords is bad practice and it is utterly unnecessary.

Knowing someone’s account password gives you access to much more than their email. You can then log onto Teams and read the conversations in the private teams that person belongs to, or open protected SharePoint documents, or read whatever’s in their OneDrive for Business account, or take part as that person in Yammer conversations. As people move more data into cloud services, knowing personal passwords becomes the key to access all that data rather than just a mailbox.

The sad thing is that no need exists for anyone to ever share the password to their account. Mailbox delegation, shared mailboxes, Microsoft 365 Groups, and Teams all provide other ways for senior people to collaborate effectively and securely with their assistants.

No matter what size your company is, it’s time to stop the awful habit of password sharing now. Make sure that none of your users share passwords, and if you find that some do, be kind but firm and help them understand why what they are doing is so dreadfully wrong.

Better Sharing Options Exist

If people argue back and say that sharing passwords is the only way they can collaborate with their assistants, take the opportunity to prove that they are dead wrong. Clinging to techniques that worked in the 1980s is not a recipe for good IT security or successful collaboration. Point out that a variety of methods exist in Office 365 to allow better and more secure sharing:

Microsoft 365 Groups and Teams both support shared calendars, so supporting the executive’s calendar is not a problem. Outlook for iOS and Android support access to shared mailboxes and Microsoft 365 Groups, and Teams has its own mobile client, so there’s no problem getting to information when on the road.

Deploy MFA Now

Using basic authentication to connect to Exchange Online exposes mailboxes to attack, including business email compromise attacks. And accounts that are only protected by passwords, especially those shared with other people, are more likely to be pwned. Every account used by senior personnel and those used by administrators should be protected by MFA and you should check the MFA status of accounts periodically.

After you use MFA to protect an account, knowing passwords is not enough for others to access the account. They need to have access to the second authentication method, like a mobile phone. Although it’s conceivable that executives might give their mobile phone to their assistants to allow access to their email, implementing MFA in a tenant is an excellent way to begin eradicating password sharing.

Break Old Habits

Executives have different modes of working and the transition from email-based, password-sharing access to mailboxes will be difficult for some (and their assistants). It is sensible to sit down with the assistants to understand the ebb and flow of information and how the executive processes work to come up with the right solution for them. The good thing is that Office 365 offers different highly functional options. The challenge is to pick the right one for the person to help them break the horrible and dangerous habit of password sharing.


The Office 365 for IT Pros eBook goes into great detail about all these topics. Isn’t it worth your while having access to the best and most up-to-date information about Office 365?

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