The change, which takes place April 21, is designed 'to reflect the range of features and benefits in the subscription' plans, the company said. Credit: Martyn Williams/IDG Microsoft today announced name changes to the Office 365 subscription plans in the Business line, substituting “Microsoft 365” instead. The Redmond, Wash. developer did not touch subscription plans aimed at enterprise, education and government. Plan names will automatically change on April 21, Microsoft said in an online statement. Prices of the plans will not change. Office 365 Business Essentials, the lowest-priced plan in the Business line, will become Microsoft 365 Business Basic. Office 365 Business, the middling plan in the trio that provides the Office applications and OneDrive, but no other services, will become Microsoft 365 Apps. Office 365 Business Premium, the most capable and most expensive subscription plan of the three, will become Microsoft 365 Business Standard. Microsoft will change the moniker of Microsoft 365 Business to Microsoft 365 Business Premium to fit it into the Business line as the top-dollar $20 per-user per-month plan. That subscription adds security and management tools to Office 365 Business Standard, née Premium. (Currently, this is the lowest-priced plan in the Microsoft 365 line. After the name changes, though, it will fall somewhere in the middle.) Finally, the orphan of Office 365, the Office 365 ProPlus deal, which like Office 365 Business limits the bits to the Office applications and OneDrive, will get the same Microsoft 365 Apps nameplate. (Microsoft said if it needed to differentiate the two, it would append “for business” and “for enterprise” on the offerings.) Subscription label changes aside, everything will remain untouched. “There are no price or feature changes to plans at this time (emphasis added),” Microsoft said in a short Q&A embedded in the announcement. What’s the frequency, Redmond? As to why Microsoft will upend its Office 365 line with a rebranding project, the company had two reasons. “We want our products to reflect the range of features and benefits in the subscription,” the company noted, again in the Q&A. Specifically, Microsoft pointed to past additions to Office 365 Business Essentials and Business Premium plans, notably the Teams collaboration, video conferencing and online meeting software, as justifying a step up in naming. “Second, we’re always looking for ways to simplify,” the company continued. “This new approach to naming our products is designed to help you quickly find the plan you need and get back to your business.” Microsoft’s second reason was the weaker of the two. Ever since the 2017 introduction of Microsoft 365 as a subscription plan label, Microsoft has had an identity problem, with that line and the much older Office 365 crossing streams. Just what was Microsoft 365? How was it different — better than, by price anyway — from the original? Initially, Microsoft 365 was an über-suite, an über-subscription, for it started with Office 365, then added more, most importantly a subscription to Windows 10. Microsoft 365, then, was Office 365 + Windows 10. (It was more, but those pieces were the most important.) Microsoft could be applauded by bringing more of its subscriptions under the Microsoft 365 moniker – that’s clearly the name that will rule all at some point – but the brand remains scatter-brained. Some subscriptions are for consumers, as Microsoft also today announced an Office 365-to-Microsoft 365 name change for its Personal and Home deals; others are for business but sans Windows 10; yet more are for enterprises wishing for the kitchen sink, Windows included. That’s not a brand, that’s just a mob. And a large swath of Microsoft’s plans will remain, at least for now, tapped as Office 365, including all the enterprise-, education- and government-aimed subscriptions, ranging from Office 365 A1 to Office 365 E5. To crowd those plans under a Microsoft 365 umbrella will take some doing, as the company will have to figure out how to untangle the duplicate x3 and x5 suffixes. Related content news analysis Apple earnings: About that iPhone 'slump' in China Based on information from Thursday's earnings report, it seems that data pointing to an iPhone slump in China were over-baked. By Jonny Evans May 03, 2024 9 mins iMac iPhone Apple news Microsoft begins to phase out ‘classic’ Teams Microsoft is encouraging Teams customers to move to the new, faster version of the collaboration app; the older version will be switched off next year. 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