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Which two actions can you perform to achieve this goal?

You are the Office 365 administrator for your company. The company recently subscribed to Office
365 ProPlus.
When performing a test deployment, you receive the following error message: “Windows cannot
find ‘C:\Program Files\Microsoft Office 15 \clientX64\integratedOffice. exe’. Make sure you typed
the name correctly, and then try again. “
You need to successfully complete the test deployment.
Which two actions can you perform to achieve this goal? Each correct answer presents a complete
solution.

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A.
Manually remove the registry subkeys associated with Office 2013, and then restart the Office 365
ProPlus installation.

B.
completely uninstall existing versions of Office 2013 and then restart the Office 365 ProPlus
installation.

C.
Download the Office 365 ProPlus package to a file share, and then deploy Office 365 ProPlus by
using Group Policy.

D.
Automate the installation of Office 365 ProPlus applications by using Microsoft System Center
Configuration Manager.

13 Comments on “Which two actions can you perform to achieve this goal?

  1. WallkerPF says:

    If A) is true, than I would select B) either because unistalling completely Office 2013 sure removes registry subkeys associated with Office 2013 ProPlus.
    Why SSCM than?




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  2. NoOne says:

    SCCM sounds incorrect in this scenario. You Could however run a script before executing the click once installation to removed the key mentioned by Anna. But this can also be done trough GPO or file share.

    I would say that removing any other Office 2013 versions should remove the same key since it’s a subkey of Office v15 in the registery. I would go for A & B




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  3. TBE says:

    A&B correct. Complete uninstall Office 2013 (via Program & Features or manually) before installing Office 365 ProPlus. Automate installation by using System Center results in the same error if Office 2013 is still installed.




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  4. Massimo says:

    A & B.
    Using different deployment methods such as a GPO or SCCM won’t fix the underlying issue, which is a conflict with installed (or not-correctly-removed) Office 2013 applications.




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  5. John L says:

    A & B are the answer – It’s finding bits of Office 2013 which need removing.
    SCCM could be used to remove Office 2013, but I’d say D is wrong as it doesn’t specify using SCCM to remove 2013 in the answer.




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