 says, I am in the process of converting our in-house email server to an Exchange Online Office 365 and could use some help. I have an end user that has three mailboxes, only three, at different domains. How do I go about migrating their email over for each of their different accounts and give them access to be able to manage each account individually without having to pay for extra licenses? Why do they have three? And can that be consolidated? Is this that we've always done it that way? And where are these two domains? Are they on the in-house server, which would kind of bring up why are you doing this in the first place? If they're on external servers, there really isn't an issue. You can add those to the client. I thought we decided we were not going to judge people on the decisions they make. We were just going to help them. Just asking questions. No, we never made that. It's more info. Yeah, I'm not an Exchange person, but the first thing that comes to mind when I hear the question is, are we talking about three separate email accounts or three aliases that reflect different domains? Good point. So how would you answer it knowing that it might be aliases, Hal and Joy, and whoever else might know Exchange? Never find a way to say. There really isn't anything to do because an alias is a secondary reference to an existing mailbox. You can have, I have one mailbox right now that I've got an alias with. I can log into the mailbox with either username. Yeah, but it's one mailbox, not more. So that was going to be my question on the online account. Yeah, how do you send it out? Can you send it out as either email? Because I don't know Exchange. So if it's an alias, you can pick the send from the seal. Yes. Then there's really nothing to manage in that scenario, right? It's all one thing. So the question leads me to presume that it is technically three separate accounts. Which is not a problem without look anyway. You can, like I think we all have multiple accounts that are logged into a single account. So I can manage all those things. It's the last part of this question. So whether it's three aliases on one domain, which doesn't sound like what he's saying, I think he's three different emails. Three different tenants that he has access into, which again, all of us on this call, we all have that. The last part, without having to pay for extra licenses. You pay for the license, well, I guess it's a mailbox. You pay for the license for Outlook, right? And just like you, you probably have multiple accounts that come into your Outlook. But you have to have the license for the mailbox. So who controls those domains? Is it a subdomain that they have bought? Like the company has been acquired and now ABC company bought XYZ company and now you can create that as a, use that as a registered domain in your tenant. I don't know. So yeah, you can use it as an alias. I think this goes back to our initial question of why? Like what is the purpose? Because at the end of the day, if they have three separate like other emails that they're using out somewhere else, maybe those would make good groups. That's a lot of times at the end of the day, they're using an email for the wrong reasons. So they've got an email set up to like get information from somebody, which maybe that's a good SharePoint site. Maybe you need to use OneDrive for that instead. Maybe they're using it to communicate in which case, could you switch that to just simply a new group which would have a group inbox and then you just basically put people on that group inbox, take them on and off as they need it. If it's a subdomain, if it's something else, you could just simply add a new alias and let them use it that way. And there's a lot of simple solutions to this. The big question is what are they doing now and what is the purpose? Because that could ultimately give you different reasons to do different things. Yeah. And shared mailboxes don't require a license either. You can use a shared mailbox. But depending on where you're coming from. So I have my collab talk. I've got my rencor. I've got my techie gurus. I've got my Gmail. Well, all of those feed into Outlook. And so I'm able to go into one version of Outlook and I'm able to do that. If I'm receiving email, I can filter the view on that. If I'm sending out, I can change which one account it's coming from. So there's that part of it. But I have my MVP account, my collab talk account, which I'm paying for individually. Company paid the other one. And then another company is paying for those. So there's payments being made. So that's how I interpreted this. If I'm paying for those other domains and it goes back to the why question. But if, you know, so you, you know, there's a cost with having a domain, managing the domain. And so you can't get out of doing that. But you can manage all of that from a single Outlook instance. Exactly. In the migration scenario, are you able to have some users on the on-prem exchange and others in the online with the same domain? So you can have that hybrid experience. Is that something that's possible? I believe so because I've got a client that has multiple domains. And I know they have some in the on-prem. I know they have some in the online. I'm pretty sure that they've got them using both domains. But I wouldn't like, don't quote me on it, but I think that's okay. That's one area that I would say, I look, you know, in the cloud world, email has the longest life of being cloud. And it's the most stable and secure of any cloud instance of any product or service that's out there. I would, again, for organizations and if not, because it's usually the first place when companies were starting to move the cloud, the first thing that we do is move to email. It's just the, it's the hardiest of the solutions that are out there. Thank you, Christian, for that. You've got mail in my head from the original. You've got mail from AOL. I didn't need that in my- Remember when we used to wait for that? Like we'd sit and wait for it? Yes. Now we get one more email. I was like, oh, it's like- No more mail. Well, there's something about the tactile experience, hearing the shoo that it went out. Yes. You don't hear it. You're like, wait, did that just send? It sent. Did it go? Oh.