Microsoft 365 isn't one app -- it's five apps working together as a connected system. Each app handles a specific job, and they share data behind the scenes so you don't have to copy things between them.
Understanding how the pieces fit together will save you time and help you avoid working in the wrong place.
| App | What It Handles | Think of It As... |
|---|---|---|
| Outlook | Shared calendars, email, meeting invites | The schedule board |
| Teams | Conversations, channels, calls, file sharing | The crew radio + bulletin board |
| Planner | Task boards -- creating, assigning, and tracking work | The assignment clipboard |
| To Do | Personal task view -- everything assigned to you in one place | Your daily checklist |
| OneDrive | File storage and sharing -- photos, documents, reports | The shared filing cabinet |
The real power of Microsoft 365 is that the apps share data automatically. You don't need to copy information between them. Here are the main connections:
When a manager assigns a task to you in Planner, that task automatically appears in your To Do app under "Assigned to me." You don't need to check Planner directly -- To Do pulls your tasks in for you.
This means drivers can use To Do as their single source of truth for assigned work.
A Planner task board can be embedded directly inside a Teams channel as a tab. This means the whole team can see and interact with task boards without switching to a separate app.
This is typically set up by managers on the desktop version of Teams. Once the tab is added, everyone in the channel can access it from any device.
Files shared in a Teams channel are automatically stored in a OneDrive/SharePoint folder connected to that channel. Every channel has a Files tab where you can see everything that's been shared there.
This means files shared in Teams aren't lost in the chat -- they're organized and accessible anytime through both Teams and OneDrive.
Calendar events created in Outlook (like scheduled meetings) can automatically create a Teams meeting link. And Teams meeting reminders appear in your Outlook calendar.
Group calendars in Outlook (like on-call schedules or time-off calendars) are visible to everyone in the group, keeping the whole team on the same page.
As a driver, your day-to-day experience is simpler. You mainly check three things:
You generally don't need to open Planner directly. Tasks assigned to you in Planner automatically appear in your To Do app under "Assigned to me." To Do is your one-stop view for all assigned work.
Short answer: no. Here's why each app has its own job:
Bottom line:
Channel posts are visible to everyone in that channel -- use them for anything the team should see (announcements, updates, requests).
Chats are private 1-on-1 or small group conversations -- use them for side conversations, personal questions, or anything that doesn't need to be broadcast to the whole channel.
It depends on how you share them:
Either way, your files are stored in the cloud and accessible from any device -- phone, tablet, or computer.
On desktop, you have access to the full feature set of every app. Some features are only available here:
If you're setting up the team's workflow (creating plans, organizing channels, configuring calendars), desktop is the place to do it.
A few practices that help the system work well: