Viva Engage communities are becoming available inside Microsoft Teams as a native experience. This means your communities, conversations, leadership updates, and company-wide discussions can now live closer to where employees already collaborate every day.
Instead of switching between Teams and Viva Engage, users will be able to discover, follow, and participate in community conversations directly from the Teams interface.
For organizations, this is a big step toward bringing employee engagement, internal communication, and knowledge sharing into the flow of work.
What is changing?
Microsoft is bringing Viva Engage communities into Microsoft Teams so employees can access community conversations from the same place they use for chats, channels, meetings, and collaboration.
Community notifications can also appear in the Teams activity feed, helping important updates become part of daily work instead of becoming “one more app to check.”
The new experience supports two main layouts:
Unified view
Communities appear as a section inside the Chat experience. This allows chats, group chats, and communities to appear in one familiar list.
Split view
Communities appear as a separate section alongside chats and channels. This keeps communities visible while still separating them from regular team collaboration spaces.
In both experiences, existing Viva Engage memberships are synced automatically. Favorites are carried over, and notifications can take users directly back to the right community in Teams.
Key capabilities of Viva Engage Communities in Teams
The new Viva Engage experience in Teams is not only a shortcut. It introduces a more connected way for users to find communities, post updates, and stay engaged.
Some of the key capabilities include:
Find your communities
Users can view their top communities and browse the communities they already belong to directly from Teams.
Organize important communities
Users can favorite key communities and leave communities they no longer need, helping keep the experience focused and relevant.
Create posts from Teams
Users can start discussions, ask questions, share praise, create polls, and publish announcements from inside a community.
Post or comment as a delegate
When delegate permissions are assigned, users can post or reply on behalf of leaders or teams.
Manage activities and notifications
Viva Engage updates can appear in the Teams activity feed. Users can also adjust notification preferences based on how they want to stay informed.
Search communities and conversations
Users can search for communities and search within a community to find specific posts, replies, or discussions.
View community analytics
Community owners, admins, and communicators can track engagement using analytics such as active members, posts, and activity trends.
Access community events
Users can view upcoming, live, and past events from the Events tab and join sessions or watch recordings from the community.
Together, these features make Viva Engage Communities in Teams a more practical place for employees to connect, learn, and participate without leaving their daily workspace.
What admins need to know
For Microsoft 365 and Teams admins, this change is important because the experience depends on the right access, settings, and rollout approach.
Here are the key admin actions to review:
- Make sure Viva Engage is not blocked at the network level.
- Confirm that users are allowed to sign in to Viva Engage through Microsoft Entra ID.
- Verify that users have the required Microsoft 365, Teams, and Viva Engage access.
- Use the Microsoft Teams admin center to manage whether Viva Engage experiences in Teams are enabled.
- Decide whether to pilot the experience first or roll it out broadly.
- Choose whether unified view or split view is better for your organization.
A phased rollout is usually the safer approach. Start with a pilot group, collect feedback, and then expand to more users once navigation, notifications, and community ownership are clear.
Use IT office hours to support adoption
This rollout is a good opportunity for IT teams to support adoption instead of only enabling a feature.
One practical idea is to create or refresh an “Ask IT” or “Digital Workplace Help” community.
You can use this community to:
- Answer user questions during weekly office hours.
- Pin helpful answers and short guides.
- Share quick tips about using Viva Engage in Teams.
- Collect feedback from early users.
- Reduce repeated support questions.
This approach helps employees understand the new experience while also building trust with IT and internal communication teams.
Add Viva Engage to Teams channels
Viva Engage is not limited to the main Communities entry point in Teams. You can also add Viva Engage as a tab inside a Teams channel.
This is useful when a specific team needs quick access to a broader community or topic.
For example:
- HR teams can pin a People and Culture community.
- Sales teams can pin a Customer Wins community.
- Engineering teams can pin a Dev Practices topic.
- Regional teams can pin location-specific communities.
When adding Viva Engage as a tab, make sure you explain why the tab exists and how the team should use it. Otherwise, users may see it as another unused tab.
Quick rollout checklist
Before rolling out Viva Engage Communities in Teams, review this checklist:
- Confirm Viva Engage access and licensing for your target users.
- Decide whether unified view or split view is the best fit.
- Run a pilot with a small group of users.
- Collect feedback on navigation, notifications, and usefulness.
- Identify core communities such as company news, leadership updates, HR help, communities of practice, social groups, DEI spaces, and regional hubs.
- Publish simple guidance for community owners.
- Review existing Viva Engage or Yammer networks.
- Identify whether tenant-to-tenant migration or network consolidation is required.
- Use a dedicated migration approach instead of relying only on manual exports.
Why migration planning matters
Microsoft provides the integrated Teams experience, but organizations are still responsible for managing their Viva Engage data, communities, and migration strategy.
If your organization has multiple tenants, legacy Yammer networks, or communities spread across environments, you may need a proper migration and consolidation plan before promoting Viva Engage in Teams.
This is where Apps4.Pro Migration Manager can help.
With Apps4.Pro, organizations can:
- Perform tenant-to-tenant Viva Engage migrations.
- Consolidate Viva Engage or Yammer networks.
- Move communities, members, conversations, likes, best answers, mentions, and tags.
- Migrate connected files from SharePoint and legacy Yammer storage.
- Run migrations in controlled waves.
- Monitor migration progress.
- Validate results before directing users to the new Teams experience.
Final thoughts
Viva Engage Communities in Microsoft Teams can make employee engagement more visible, accessible, and connected to daily work.
But the success of this experience depends on more than simply enabling the feature. Admins and communication teams should plan the rollout, prepare community owners, guide users, and review whether migration or consolidation is required.
If your organization is preparing for Viva Engage in Teams, now is the right time to clean up communities, review legacy Yammer networks, and make sure your engagement data is ready for the next experience.
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