On March 31st, 2020 at ~5:15am UTC, users started experiencing issues with SharePoint Online.
It seems that the major areas affected were APAC, Japan and Australia. However, some users in Europe reported they were affected as well.
During this time, many admins had to turn to Twitter for official Office 365 monitoring outage updates.
Microsoft soon reported that the root cause of the issues users were experiencing was due to a throttling rule being incorrectly applied to users and they were attempting to disable it to mitigate impact.
Many expressed concerns about losing the ability to edit documents and even expressed frustrations about losing hours of work. This outage has major affects on productivity for users since they were unable to edit or access documents for close to 12 hours.
Microsoft reported roughly 8 hours later at ~1:15pm UTC that they were still experiencing issues but were close to resolving impact.
Roughly two hours later, around 3 pm UTC, Microsoft reported that the issue had been resolved.
In a cloud-world, outages are bound to happen. While Microsoft is responsible for restoring service during outages, IT needs to take ownership of their environment and user experience. It is crucial to have greater visibility into business impacts during a service outage the moment it happens.
ENow’s Office 365 Monitoring and Reporting solution enables IT Pros to pinpoint the exact services effected and root cause of the issues an organization is experiencing during a service outage by providing:
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