I have an active BizSpark account and I want to transfer this to another person in my company. How can I do this?
I tried to transfer my account using the instructions in this Microsoft article
https://azure.microsoft.com/en-us/documentation/articles/billing-subscription-transfer/ but without success.
Update
In don't have the "Manage" option on my BizSpark account.
From the official FAQ:
https://www.microsoft.com/bizspark/faqs.aspx
"To reassign your BizSpark administrator privileges, you will first need to add a user to your BizSpark account... Once the invitation has been accepted and the new user has received their confirmation of enrollment"
See screenshot below for details:
Full text from FAQ screenshot:
To reassign your BizSpark administrator privileges, you will first
need to add a user to your BizSpark account. Please keep in mind your
BizSpark account is limited; all users count toward this limit, even
if they are later removed.
Go to the Microsoft.com/BizSpark portal and log in with the Microsoft account assigned to the current administrator.
Navigate to the My BizSpark tab
Click the Manage link at the right of the page
Click manage members tab
Add the new member (for example, John Doe)
The new member will receive an email invitation, and will have to accept the BizSpark Terms of Service and EULA to proceed.
Once the invitation has been accepted and the new user has received
their confirmation of enrollment:
Go to the Microsoft.com/BizSpark portal and log in with the Microsoft account assigned to the current administrator.
Navigate to the My BizSpark tab
Click the Manage link at the right of the page
Click manage members tab
Click Change Primary Contact, above the list of team members
Select the new administrator from the list.
If you are unable to locate the Primary Account holder or they have
left the company, please contact BizSpark support to make the
necessary changes.
Related
Recently we have purchased a production account. I have logged into the account as Account Administrator but I am unable to see Docusign Admin. This was not the case for the developer account where it was already present from beforehand.
I need it as I have to add an organisation.
Below I have added a picture of how it looks in dev account.
So, most likely you have someone else in your company who is the admin. You will to find out who that is.
Every account has to have one admin at all times. You don't see to have administrative rights, but someone else may have.
If not, or if you don't know who that is - you will need to contact customer support to get this restored and take over as admin.
Another option is that you have multiple accounts in production. Meaning, when you log in, your user is a member of more than one account. You need to switch accounts. That switcher is an option on the right-top menu.
If you had "Admin" in Demo, then someone had to add that as it is not provided by default. Admin tools (Org Management and Access Management w/ SSO) are only included in the Enterprise Pro plan. For Business Pro or Standard plans, it is a paid add-on. Check to see if your account is an Enterprise Pro plan.
Also, if your company already has Org Mgmt, a "DocuSign Admin" (org, not account admin) needs to link this new account to the Org.
I'd like to change the root of a Docusign Dev account from one person to another but I don't see if and how that's possible. I could create a new account however since we have envelopes and specific settings in the account, abandoning the current account would be our option of last resort.
The terms "account" and "user" are sometimes confused.
For the user:
Log in to the developer account in question.
From upper-right menu select "Manage Profile."
You'll find the profile page where you can change the email and name.
For the account:
Log in to the developer account in question.
From the top navigation bar select "Settings."
From the left menu select "Account Profile."
Click sign up and log in to your account and then enter your name and email. If that worked and you managed to sign up that’s great. If not, please contact the company.
I need to let someone access a SQL Database and have no time to study and catch up with all the constantly morphing AD stuff so I want to make her one of the existing subscription Co-Administrators added 9 years ago. I just want to add her (ie her Microsoft account) as a Classic Administrator.
Under IAM, Classic Administrators, I clicked Add, Co-Administrator, and a list of five email-like strings showed up. (I don't know whether these represent e-mail addresses or Microsoft accounts.)
How do I add another Microsoft account to this list so that I can make her a Co-Administrator?
If the Microsoft account (i.e the email address you see in the list in your question) is not existing in the same azure ad tenant of the subscription , you need to invite her (i.e. the Microsoft account) to the tenant first, navigate to the Azure Active Directory in the portal -> Users -> New Guest User, note don't forget to accept the invitation email.
Then the Microsoft account will be a guest user in your tenant, just navigate to your subscription and add co-administrator, you can search for the Microsoft account (i.e. the email address).
I need to let someone access a SQL Database
I am not sure you mean to let her access the SQL database in a management tier or data tier. If you what her to access the data tier e.g. do operations on the data in the tables, you will also need to configure the Active Directory admin in the SQL Server, navigate to the SQL Server in the portal -> Active Directory admin -> Set admin -> invite the user you what -> Save, more details see this link: https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/sql-database/sql-database-aad-authentication-configure
I am trying to give other users access to my resources in the Azure portal. I am trying to add them as a Contributor, but it seems like they are not able to see the resources when they login to the Azure portal.
Here's the access control list for the VM:
Any ideas why they can't see the resource when they login to the portal?
They are a Contributor.
When you add a user to an Azure subscription, s/he is also added to the directory if s/he isn't already there. This is considered an "invitation" that must be accepted before the user can get access. Tell the person to check their email, if this is the first time the email address has been added to a subscription in the directory. (Note that personal subscriptions are usually created along with a new directory whereas company subscriptions are usually in the company's directory.)
After accepting the invitation, s/he will need to switch to the directory before the subscription will be visible. You can do that in the top-right, like Juunas mentioned in the comment above. Here's a link to the directory switcher: https://portal.azure.com/#menu/account.
Steps to reproduce-
As owner:
Go to Resource Group you want to give access to:
Go to IAM:
Go to 'Add ROLE ASSIGNMENTS'
Search the name you want to give access to:
Select the Role (Contributor in your case)
Click Add and they will recieve an email.
I have two businesses and each has an Azure subscription. I'm an admin for each using my same MS email account.
Bill is only involved in one of the subscriptions, but when I log into my subscription "Local Happenings" (to which Bill should have no access) I still see his email address in the URL.
This picture shows it better:
https://db.tt/kvuccFOO
I'm wondering why this is, and if it could potentially be a problem.
My fear is that if he decides to cancel his business's account, then he will cancel mine or something.
I tried again to create a new subscription to verify I wasn't already logged into his subscription (I used a different browser), but it still shows his email address in the URL.
Anyone have any ideas?
UPDATE 1:
https://db.tt/QHJrfIno
I see that my subscription is under his "default directory". I never selected this when creating my subscription. How do I change this, and is it the culprit?
What shows under the "Active Directory" tab in the management portal for each Subscription? When you say "MS email account" is that an old hotmail-type account or one registered via Office 365 or Azure?
The fact that the account showing in the URL has #XXX.onmicrosoft.com address suggests there is a link back to an Azure Active Directory (AAD) instance. If this is shared between the subscriptions (potentially as a login from it was used to create on of the subscriptions) then this would be the cause.
You need to make sure a non-AAD account is an admin on the subscription so that removal of an associated Azure AD instance will not orphan the subscription.
Have a read of the AAD documentation here for more information: http://msdn.microsoft.com/library/azure/dn629581.aspx