a black and white logo
a blue and black logo

MS Office

MS Office | Microsoft
Microsoft Office is a suite of productivity software that includes a variety of applications, servers and services. It is available in several versions, including a personal computer version, a small business version, and a large enterprise version.

The most common applications in Microsoft Office are:

Word: a word processing program for creating and editing documents
Excel: a spreadsheet program for organizing and analyzing data
PowerPoint: a presentation program for creating and presenting slide shows
Outlook: a program for managing e-mails and personal information
OneNote: a program for creating notes
Access: a database management program
Publisher: a desktop publishing program

Microsoft Office is used by individuals, businesses, and organizations for a variety of tasks, including creating and editing documents, creating and delivering presentations, managing email and schedules, analyzing data, and creating and managing databases.

Related technologies include Microsoft Exchange, a messaging and collaboration platform, and Microsoft SharePoint, a Web-based collaboration and document management platform. These two technologies are often used in conjunction with Microsoft Office to enable users to collaborate on documents and share information within an organization.

BITS experts have used MS Office in a variety of projects. A selection of case studies and references can be found below.

Centralization and standardization of applications in Group companies at different locations

In this project, BITS centralized and standardized the IT infrastructure of several Group companies at different locations.

Conception, planning, control and execution of a data center move with production-critical infrastructure

BITS organized and coordinated the relocation of the IT landscape from one data center to a new data center for a globally active corporation in the automotive industry (data center migration). The project comprised around 150 applications and 600 servers, some of which had production-relevant effects, and was supported by us over a period of 3 years.

Go to Top