Microsoft Dynamics 365 Upgrades brings together Microsoft’s well-established Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP), Customer Relationship Management (CRM), and Business Intelligence (BI) solutions into a single product offering. It also offers an extremely flexible licensing structure that will allow businesses to deliver just the functionality required for different teams and individuals across the business.
Microsoft will deliver two major updates each year – in April (wave 1) and October (wave 2), as well as ongoing, regular minor updates for bug fixes and performance improvements in the background. To help online customers prepare for the two major upgrades each year, Microsoft have announced new milestones and early visibility resources, which will be available to customers before the general availability of each major release. Before a major release, customers will be able to:
Some changes will be automatically applied for all users, while others will be on a ‘opt-in’ basis where administrators need to enable the new functionality.
The five-stage upgrade path is a structured upgrade path to support our clients. These form a continuous solution framework, based on common principles that we follow from the start of any client engagement, Microsoft D365 implementation and throughout the Life Cycle of the support services agreement. Our team keeps any possible business disruption to a minimum and supports the cultural transformation needed to make any upgrades a success. From analysis to project implementation to support services, we follow a mature, well thought-out life-cycle that doesn’t end once the solution is implemented.
Assessing the scope of existing solutions to determine if upgrading is right for the business.
A deep dive into technical elements to determine the cost of upgrading.
Building foundations to enable seamless upgrade.
Seamless upgrade to Dynamics 365 using the depth of our expertise and Microsoft tools.
Providing ongoing support and maximizing Return On Investment.
Check you have the right environments set up: Best practices for Dynamics 365 (and development in general) are to have four environments: production, UAT, Test and Development. This keeps development far away from your live environment so that no work breaks you live system.
Download the release plan when they become available: This will be about 2-3 months prior to each release. Reading these will give you a good idea of what the next release includes and can give you a sense of scale and the changes being made, which you can evaluate against your system.
Give yourself enough time to test: The most time-consuming task is testing the updates, so the earlier that you set up the preview the longer you have to test. If anything is causing an issue, then you will have time to diagnose and fix this.
Review customisations, integration and third-party solutions: Now could also be a good time to review what customisations, integrations and third-party solutions you have in place to make sure that they are supported; anything unsupported is likely to break during an upgrade.
Evaluate new features against your requirements regularly: The updates are done to bring new functionality, improvements and benefits to Dynamics 365. An update might introduce a new functionality that removes the need for a third-party tool or might simplify an internal process.