

Under ‘Account Settings’ is a clickable link.Ĭlick on the link to open a browser window.Īll mailboxes hosted by Office 365 have the same default login web link or links which direct you to the correct page. Outlook itself should show you the web link at File | Info then choose the mail account. Login and let your browser save the login name and password. It’s a great fallback position if your usual mail connection goes bad.

OWA will work with any modern browser on a computer with Internet access. Webmail for Office 365 or Exchange Server mailboxes is called ‘Outlook Web App’ or ‘Outlook Web Access’. Here’s how to find the webmail setting for Office 365 or Exchange Server mailboxes. Give this a crack, hopefully it helps keep your marketing people happy, and your users won’t have to see much more of that awful highway Microsoft usually show us at the sign-in page.Browser based email is a great standby in case your main email program, like Outlook, goes wrong or the mailbox connection doesn’t work.

I struggled a little to find this, but eventually found application guidance here on the TechNet Active Directory Team Blog.īasically, you want to link your end users to Īfter some quick brand-guessing, I found out that local development shop, Readify, have taken the approach of customising WAAD, so here’s a great way to see the link in action: can also use this mechanism to redirect people to AD FS, as Microsoft have done for their corporate tenant. If you want to deploy links on an intranet or to browser favourites or anything like that to send users directly to your Office 365 custom branding, you’ll likely want to have that custom branding in place from the get-go. The custom branding doesn’t show up until a user’s entered their username and hit tab, and then the images have loaded, by which point they’re probably most of the way through typing their password anyway. YMMV!Ĭonsider a scenario where you’ve configured custom branding for your Windows Azure Active Directory login URL at. Warning (August 2017): The guidance below is of questionable use now that Microsoft have started to roll out the new Azure AD sign-in experience which doesn't seem to honour the `?whr` querystring.
