Free Course

For IT Administrators and Helpdesk Professionals Managing Microsoft 365 Tenants

Aligned to NIST SP 800-63CIS ControlsISO 27001NCSC guidance

Security Foundations for M365 Administrators

Go from managing M365 to securing it — without starting from scratch.

Configure the security controls that protect your Microsoft 365 tenant against the attacks that target it every day. Multi-factor authentication and Conditional Access configured properly, email protection that catches phishing, security alerts you can triage with confidence, and a security posture report your management can act on. Eight modules, entirely free.

What you'll deploy
Conditional Access policies that block 99% of credential attacks
Email authentication (SPF, DKIM, DMARC) and MDO protection policies
Incident response procedure for compromised accounts and phishing
Quarterly security posture report for management
WHERE YOU ARE M365 Admin Center Exchange Online Entra ID basics Intune / Autopilot Teams / SharePoint THIS COURSE WHERE YOU'LL BE Defender portal Conditional Access Email protection Incident response Security reporting
100% Free | 8 modules across 3 phases | 25+ hours at your own pace | No account needed | Updated May 2026
Course Agenda View all 8 modules

Who this course is for

“My manager told me to handle security and I don’t know where to start.” You manage users, licenses, and Exchange Online. Now you’re also responsible for MFA, phishing protection, and incident response — with no security training and no dedicated security team. This course starts from the admin tools you already know and adds the security layer on top.

“We have MFA turned on but I’m not sure it’s configured correctly.” Security Defaults is on. Maybe. Or Conditional Access is half-deployed with a break-glass account you’ve never tested. This course walks through the exact policies to create, the exceptions to handle (the CEO, shared mailboxes, service accounts), and how to verify they work.

“A user clicked a phishing link and I had no idea what to do next.” You revoked their sessions. Maybe reset the password. But did you check for inbox forwarding rules? OAuth app consent? Lateral movement? This course gives you the step-by-step response procedure so you stop guessing when incidents happen.

“I manage multiple M365 tenants and need a repeatable security baseline.” You’re an MSP technician configuring five or ten customer tenants. You need the same Conditional Access policies, the same email authentication records, the same device compliance rules deployed consistently. This course builds that repeatable baseline.

“I want to move from helpdesk into security but I don’t have certifications.” You reset passwords, manage devices, handle escalations. You already work inside M365 every day. Security operations is the natural next step — and M365 security is the most direct path from helpdesk to SOC for anyone in a Microsoft environment.

“I need to report our security posture to leadership and I don’t know how.” Secure Score is a number. Your finance director needs context: what risks exist, what controls are in place, what improvements cost, and what happens if you don’t act. This course builds the quarterly report that gets budget approved.

Whatever your background — if the subject interests you and you’re willing to put in the work, this course is for you.

Before and after this course

Before

Security Defaults is on. You think. MFA prompts appear sometimes but you’re not sure which users are covered, which are exempt, or whether the break-glass account actually works.

A user reports a suspicious email and you forward it to IT. There’s no response procedure, no evidence collection, no way to determine if the account is compromised or if anyone else received the same message.

SPF is published. You think DKIM might be on. You’ve heard of DMARC but the DNS record looks complicated and you’re not sure what it does or whether it would break anything.

Management asks about your security posture and you show them the Secure Score dashboard. They ask what the number means. You’re not sure how to answer.

After

Three Conditional Access policies are active and tested. Every user has MFA. Legacy authentication is blocked. The break-glass account is excluded, documented, and monitored. You can explain every exception.

You have a 15-minute compromised account procedure: revoke sessions, reset credentials, check inbox rules, review OAuth consents, investigate lateral movement, document findings. You’ve practiced it.

SPF, DKIM, and DMARC are configured correctly. Defender for Office 365 policies go beyond defaults. You can investigate a reported phishing email with message trace and explain what the headers mean.

Your quarterly report translates security posture into business language: risks, controls, costs, and consequences. Management approves the security budget because you made the case in terms they understand.

How the course works

Three phases build from identity foundations through protection controls to operational security. Each phase produces configurations you deploy in your own tenant:

Phase 1
Foundations

The M365 security landscape, navigating the five admin portals, Secure Score, and the 10-week improvement sequence. Then identity security: MFA, Conditional Access, sign-in log investigation, and the compromised account procedure.

Phase 2
Protection

Email protection with Defender for Office 365 and SPF/DKIM/DMARC. Device management with Intune compliance policies. Data protection with sensitivity labels, DLP, and SharePoint sharing controls.

Phase 3
Operations

Security monitoring and alert triage, the 15-minute Monday security review, basic incident response procedures, and security governance: policies, quarterly reporting, and making the case for budget.

What the content looks like

This is the real compromised account procedure from Module 6. When a user clicks a phishing link and you confirm the account is compromised, this is the checklist you execute — in this order, in under 15 minutes:

Incident Response Procedure — From Module 6: Compromised Account Response

Step 1 — Revoke: Revoke-MgUserSignInSession. All active tokens invalidated. User loses access to all M365 services immediately.

Step 2 — Reset: Reset password. Force change on next sign-in. If SSPR is enabled, disable it temporarily for this account to prevent the attacker resetting first.

Step 3 — Review inbox rules: Get-InboxRule. Look for ForwardTo, RedirectTo, DeleteMessage. Attackers create forwarding rules within minutes of compromise. Delete any rule you didn’t create.

Step 4 — Review OAuth consents: Entra Admin Center → Enterprise applications → filter by user. Revoke any application the user didn’t explicitly request. “DocuSign Verify” with Mail.ReadWrite is not DocuSign.

Step 5 — Check MFA: Were new authentication methods registered after the compromise timestamp? Attacker registers their own phone or authenticator app. Remove any method added in the attack window.

Step 6 — Document: Timestamp every action. Record what you found and what you removed. This is your evidence if legal or HR asks what happened. The module provides the template.

Six steps, 15 minutes, and you’ve contained the account compromise before the attacker can use the access they stole. The module walks through each step with the exact commands, the portal paths, and the reasoning behind the order. Every module in this course teaches at this level — practical, step-by-step, immediately deployable.

Where this leads

This course is a stepping stone. Once you’re comfortable securing your M365 environment, the M365 Security Operations course takes you into investigation, detection engineering, and threat hunting — the skills that define a SOC analyst role. Many people who start here build a career in security operations.

Usage rights and disclaimer

Course materials: Licensed for individual professional development. You may use scripts, queries, configurations, and templates from this course in your professional work. You may not redistribute course content or republish course materials.

Fictional environment: All scenarios use the fictional Northgate Engineering environment. Any resemblance to real organizations is coincidental.

Version and changelog

Current version: 2.0  |  Last updated: May 2026

May 2026 — v2.0: Course page restructured. All 8 modules at full content standard compliance.

2026 — v1.0: Course launch. 8 free modules (AD0–AD7) across 3 phases covering identity, email, devices, data, monitoring, incident response, and governance.

This course is actively maintained and updated as the Microsoft 365 security platform evolves.