Your company has a Microsoft 365 subscription. You plan to move several archived PST files to Microsoft Exchange Online mailboxes. You need to create an import job for the PST files. Which three actions should you perform before you create the import job? Each correct answer presents part of the solution. NOTE: Each correct selection is worth one point. A. Create a Microsoft Azure Storage account. B. From the Microsoft 365 compliance center, retrieve the SAS key. C. Run azcopy.exe to copy the PST files to Microsoft Azure Storage D. From Exchange admin center, run a new migration batch. E. Create a PST import mapping file. Â Suggested Answer: BCE The first step is to download and install the Azure AzCopy tool, which is the tool that you run in Step 2 to upload PST files to Office 365. You also copy the SAS URL for your organization. This URL is a combination of the network URL for the Azure Storage location in the Microsoft cloud for your organization and a Shared Access Signature (SAS) key. This key provides you with the necessary permissions to upload PST files to your Azure Storage location. Now you're ready to use the AzCopy.exe tool to upload PST files to Office 365. This tool uploads and stores them in an Azure Storage location in the Microsoft cloud. After the PST files have been uploaded to the Azure Storage location for your Office 365 organization, the next step is to create a comma-separated value (CSV) file that specifies which user mailboxes the PST files will be imported to. You'll submit this CSV file when you create a PST Import job. Reference: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/office365/securitycompliance/use-network-upload-to-import-pst-files This question is in MS-100 Exam For getting Microsoft 365 Administrator Expert Certificate Disclaimers: The website is not related to, affiliated with, endorsed or authorized by Microsoft. The website does not contain actual questions and answers from Microsoft's Certification Exams. Trademarks, certification & product names are used for reference only and belong to Microsoft.
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