We are looking for a solution to the following challenge in Microsoft Teams:
Our organization creates Microsoft Teams meeting links, but many of our internal users do not have Microsoft 365/Teams licenses. Because of this, every time they join a meeting, they cannot bypass the lobby. Someone with a license from our team must join first to admit all other participants, which has become a major operational bottleneck.
We want to understand:
- Is there any workaround to allow internal users without MSFT licenses to bypass the lobby or start the meeting without requiring us to admit them?
Is it possible to make people outside our organization co-hosts (or presenters/organizers) so they can start the meeting and let attendees in?
We found the following statement while researching, but it appears the feature may not be implemented yet:
“External users cannot be made presenters unless they are added as Guests.”
According to Microsoft documentation for Teams Live Events, to allow a guest to present you must:
Add the external user as a guest to a Team
Have them accept the guest invitation
Add them to the event group while scheduling the event
However, this doesn’t seem to work for regular Teams meetings where we need non-licensed internal users or external participants to start meetings and bypass the lobby.
We would appreciate guidance on whether:
There is an available setting to bypass the lobby for such users
Adding external users as guests enables them to start the meeting
Any upcoming features might solve this limitation
This is a significant blocker for our team, and we are looking for any official workaround or recommended approach.We are looking for a solution to the following challenge in Microsoft Teams:
Our organization creates Microsoft Teams meeting links, but many of our internal users do not have Microsoft 365/Teams licenses. Because of this, every time they join a meeting, they cannot bypass the lobby. Someone with a license from our team must join first to admit all other participants, which has become a major operational bottleneck.
We want to understand:
Is there any workaround to allow internal users without MSFT licenses to bypass the lobby or start the meeting without requiring us to admit them?
Is it possible to make people outside our organization co-hosts (or presenters/organizers) so they can start the meeting and let attendees in?
We found the following statement while researching, but it appears the feature may not be implemented yet:
“External users cannot be made presenters unless they are added as Guests.”
According to Microsoft documentation for Teams Live Events, to allow a guest to present you must:
Add the external user as a guest to a Team
Have them accept the guest invitation
Add them to the event group while scheduling the event
However, this doesn’t seem to work for regular Teams meetings where we need non-licensed internal users or external participants to start meetings and bypass the lobby.
We would appreciate guidance on whether:
There is an available setting to bypass the lobby for such users
Adding external users as guests enables them to start the meeting
Any upcoming features might solve this limitation
This is a significant blocker for our team, and we are looking for any official workaround or recommended approach.