Poor Wi-Fi signal quality is a fundamental issue, and acceptable Wi-Fi standards are well documented. It uniquely correlates Microsoft Teams call data with Wi-Fi network information.
This easy-to-read list can be used by support desks to prioritize remediation efforts, enabling customers to proactively take preventive measures before the quality of future Microsoft Teams calls is degraded by poor wireless connections. If a user consistently experiences poor Wi-Fi quality, it is likely that subsequent call experiences will also be affected. Identified networks with poor scores require remediation before any vendor (in this case, Microsoft) would engage in further troubleshooting, as such networks fall below any acceptable performance markers.
The information is simple:
Over the past several days, User X took 108 calls from a Wi-Fi network that is not supported by Microsoft or any other vendor. This issue needs to be addressed and must be remediated
The first table provides a report identifying users who are making Microsoft Teams calls from Wi-Fi networks that have been documented as below acceptable standards for real-time communications (e.g., RSSI of -67dB or better).
Variables
Columns:
The second table provides a Pivot table showing Wifi Networks where more than 1 user are connected to networks which are flagged as substandard.
Potentially you should see internal Wifi networks or when people are at conferences where they use the same network.
Grid:
Display name
UPN → redirects to User Experience page