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Managing Microsoft Teams Notifications

Teams is Microsoft’s take on group chat in response to the booming market led by Slack. Microsoft Teams is an immensely powerful application that enhances teamwork through enriched collaboration and team communication. Unlike the other Office productivity applications that have a legacy to preserve and millions of users to consider, Teams is built from scratch with the modern workplace in mind.

This also means that Microsoft Teams introduces a new work behavior, that a surprising number of people in the tier might find difficult. Also, if you haven’t already moved, migrating from skype for business to Microsoft Teams will be the best decision of your life. Teams is loaded with features that are specially designed to improve collaboration. While going back and forth between the channels, chats, mentions, and likes or an important email notification or the barrage of alerts can easily miss the eye.

It is essential to make sure that you don’t miss anything of importance, and you don't need to have extensive Office Skills to ensure that. Microsoft Teams offers several ways to access, receive, and manage the notification icon. These settings include how, when, and where your notifications appear, custom settings for channels and private messages, appearance, and alert sounds, turning off specific messages, and so on. Here are some quick tips and tricks that you could use to access notification settings if you’re not getting chat notifications and utilize all the powerful Microsoft Teams Notifications features.

  • Check the main Teams app notification settings in your Profile > Settings > Notifications to ensure they are set correctly. Manage Teams Notification Settings
  • In your Profile > Settings > General, uncheck the ‘On close, keep the application running’ setting to ensure notifications are not tracked in your Teams activity feed running in the background.
  • Ensure that important teams and channels are not hidden. Show or hide teams and channels
  • By default, channel notification sounds are off. Be sure to turn on notifications for important channels. Manage Channel Notifications
  • For any notifications set to ‘Banner and Email’, the email is only sent for missed activity. More on Email Notifications
  • Any changes to notifications settings may not be immediately applied. Changes in settings may take up to 24 hours to be fully deployed.


Default Notification Settings

If you decide not to change anything in your Microsoft Teams Notifications, you will be receiving both desktop notifications and activity feed alerts for mentions, direct messages, and mentions in the channels and teams that your part of. If you want to configure a custom settings option, read. 


Hidden Teams & Channels

If you’ve been using Teams for some time, you may be familiar with marking channels as your Favorite to receive native notifications. What used to be “Favorite” is now “Show”. Along with replacing channel “Favorite” with “Show”, the “Follow” option has now been replaced with “Channel notifications”. This allows you to manage specific channel notifications settings and the notification option that includes message preview.

Microsoft Teams notifications


Types of Priority Notifications 

Let's get a little into how each of the three Microsoft Teams Notification types work.


Activity Feed and Chat Counts

The activity notifications feed is displayed at the top of your Teams menu. In this notification type, an activity count is displayed to indicate recent activity. Just below the activity feed is your chat. This is where your group and one-on-one conversations happen. A chat count is displayed as you receive a new, unread message.

 

Desktop Banner Notifications

Desktop Notifications are also known as banner notifications. On Windows, a notification banner will show in the bottom right corner of your screen, then move to the Action Center. On a Mac, these show up in the top right corner of your screen, then move to the Control Center.


Email

If you would like notification emails sent directly to you, please make the following changes in your main Teams notification settings (Profile>Settings>Notifications):

  • Select ‘Banner and Email’ status for the notification settings for you wish to receive emails
  • Update the ‘Missed Activity Emails’ setting to the desired frequency–emails are sent notifying you of missed activity. You can turn this setting off if you do not wish to receive email notifications.

After this, users will be able to send and receive unlimited urgent messages with priority notification. 


Customize Your Notification Settings

Notification settings can be changed for the entire Teams application, specific channels, and conversations on your apps or browser tab.

 

Manage Microsoft Teams Notifications Settings

Teams’ application-wide notification settings can be found under your profile. To view or change settings, click on your profile picture in the top right corner of Teams, then Settings > Notifications. In this window, you can customize the settings to fit your needs on your mobile app.

Microsoft Teams notifications


Manage Channel Notifications

To view or update messages in channels and their notifications, click on the 3 dots next to the channel name, then click on Channel notifications on your Teams list. This is what the default settings for channel notifications look like:

Microsoft Teams notifications


Manage Conversation Notifications

If you decide you no longer wish to receive notifications for a specific conversation, it's not an issue because notifications can be turned off. Go to the beginning of a conversation in a channel, then go to the top right corner of the message and select More options > Turn off notifications from the dropdown menu. Notifications for this conversation can be turned back on if you change your mind.


Manage Notification Sounds

To turn off or turn on notification sounds, toggle on Play sound for incoming calls and notifications.


Turn off Notifications for Specific Conversations

In a channel conversation, go to the top right corner of the original message and select More options > Turn off notifications. As with muting a chat, turning off notifications to a channel conversation will stop updates for that specific conversation.

Note: You'll still receive notifications if someone directly @mentions you.


Manage Microsoft Teams Notifications on Mobile Devices

Things are slightly different on Teams' mobile app. One of the first things you'll want to do is choose whether you want to receive notifications on your phone always or only when you're not active on the desktop. (You're considered inactive after 3 minutes of inactivity.) The other thing you'll want to make sure to set are your quiet hours.

To do this, you would have to go to More in the top left corner of the mobile app > Notifications > Quiet hours, and you're all set!


Getting Notified in the App and on Desktop

You can choose whether a message preview shows on desktop by turning the toggle on for "Show message preview". You will have to select "Banner and feed" to receive notifications as both a desktop notification and as an alert in Activity.

Note: In Windows, notification banners will show in the bottom right of your screen. In macOS, they show in the top right.


Turning off Notifications During Meetings & Calls

You can do this by selecting 'Edit' next to Meetings and Calls and then turn the toggle on for Mute notifications during meetings and calls.

Note: The dropdown settings under Meeting started notification and Meeting chat notifications aren't affected by choosing to mute notifications during meetings and calls. You can modify those separately.

 

Microsoft Teams Monitoring and Alerting

The new monitoring and alerting capabilities in Microsoft Teams collaboration tool are now available in the Teams admin panel. You can use different sets of rules that are provided under the Notifications & Alerts section in the Teams admin center to help you monitor Teams capabilities and receive alerts. For instance, you can actively monitor the health and status of your Teams devices such as IP Phones, collaboration bars, and others if they unexpectedly go offline.

Your organization can use Teams monitoring and alerting to do the following items:

  • Automatically manage Teams capabilities
  • Be alerted if they show something unexpected.
  • Take corrective actions to get things back on-track.


How to Manage Monitoring and Alerting

You must be a global admin in your Microsoft 365 or a Teams service admin to configure these alerting rules. See Use Teams administrator roles to manage Teams to learn more about role-based access in Teams and which reports each admin role can access.

Follow these steps to configure rules:

  1. Sign into the Teams admin center.
  2. From the left navigation, select Notifications & alerts.
  3. Choose the rule you want to configure from Rules.


Obviously, if at any point you think you need help managing your Microsoft Teams Notifications, you can book a strategy call with us and we’d be delighted to walk you through the process.

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Last Updated 4 weeks ago

About the Author

Rijah is a professional Marketing Executive & content specialist. You may know her from her greatest hits like, "No, I can't just make it go viral." or "No, you can't have everybody as your audience." and "Yes, you're absolutely going to need a copywriter!"

Rijah Naseem

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