We have been in planning with a third party for migration to M365 for some months now. We still have Exchange 2016 and there have been debate about what you can or cannot do with this version of Exchange. Microsoft documentation seems to suggest some things that I thought were not true, so I am seeking to understand. I am also not sure that I trust the third party as a completely reliable source of information. Can anybody answer these questions definitively?
Thanks to anyone that can help confirm.
Bill Mayo
I presume that you are dual-hybrid. Hybrid AD and hybrid Exchange. My answers are correct for that environment.
[1] Yes, you can – for now. MSFT has not yet disabled connectivity from E2016, and they haven’t announced it, as far as I know, but it is just a matter of time. MSFT strongly wants everyone either in the cloud or on Exchange SE – those pump their bottom line. Other editions/versions do not.
[2] If you pay for a case, you get “best effort” support. That being said, I’ve not had to open a migration case in years. To answer your question specifically – it’s just not supported.
[3] You can use an Exchange SE server as the migration endpoint and it will proxy to the E2016 server. I did this quite recently with an E2016 server to an E2010 server. This worked fine. We did try migrating some to the E2016 server first, to see if it made a difference, but other than being slightly faster (which was probably just because of the hardware difference), we found no recognizable difference in the migration experience.
[4] This is a complex question and I’ll give you a consultant’s answer: it depends. Long story short – must you? No, you don’t have to. HOWEVER, if you are going to keep the source of authority for your users/groups/etc. in your on-prem AD, then you should – otherwise you’ll be required to do Exchange administration via PowerShell. Doable, but complex for most people. If you are ready to move the source of authority for all Exchange objects to the cloud, then no, you don’t need it. However, I strongly recommend that you do that migration separately from your M365 migration and also do it carefully and slowly. I find that most organizations are really not ready for this, even though they would like to be (for example – mail-enabled security groups can be very challenging to deal with and Microsoft’s recommendation to convert all DLs and MESGs to M365 Groups just complicates things - IMNSHO).
As a secondary item, you might find eliminating that last server difficult just because of mail relay; the solutions provided by MSFT are not complete. For some things, their solution is “replace the hardware” which isn’t always feasible.
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