www.office.com/setup Blogs: Part 1: Add An Account
Go to Microsoft Office 365 Admin Center.
From the top menu, click Admin and select Office 365.
www.office.com/setup Blogs
From the left navigation, go to USERS > Active Users and then click the + button.
www.office.com/setup Blogs
Specify Delegate Account information, including a temporary password, and then click Create.
www.office.com/setup Blogs
Note:
Licenses automatically assign to the account. Unassign the license (9) because the Delegate Account does not require a license.
Record the Delegate Account credentials (username and password). These credentials are also sent to the email address specified in the previous page.
www.office.com/setup Blogs
Click Close.
Click the Delegate Account display name to configure additional settings.
www.office.com/setup Blogs
From the left navigation, click settings and then assign the Delegate Account the Service administrator role and specify an Alternate email address.
www.office.com/setup Blogs
Part 2: Assign Specialized Roles To The Delegate Account
From the upper right corner of the screen, choose Admin > Exchange to open the Exchange Admin Center.
www.office.com/setup Blogs
Click permissions and then the + button to create a New Role Group.
www.office.com/setup Blogs
Type delegation_service as the name of the new role group.
www.office.com/setup Blogs
Under Roles, click the + button.
www.office.com/setup Blogs
Add the ApplicationImpersonation and Mailbox Search roles.
www.office.com/setup Blogs
Under Members, click the + button.
www.office.com/setup Blogs
Add the newly created Delegate Account.
www.office.com/setup Blogs
Click Save.
Office 365 updates the organization settings.
www.office.com/setup Blogs
Sign out of Microsoft Office 365.
Part 3: Change The Delegate Account Password
Sign in to Microsoft Office 365 using the new Delegate Account credentials.
www.office.com/setup Blogs
Change the temporary Delegate Account password to a permanent one.
www.office.com/se
www.office.com/setup Blogs: I've been installing Office 2013 on a lot of computers lately and I've ran into quite a few problems along the way. From annoying messages like "Sorry we ran into a problem" and "Something went wrong" to slow downloads, hanging at certain percentages during the install, it's been typical Microsoft problems all along the way.
If you've been trying to install Office 2013 on Windows 8 or Windows 7 and you're running into issues, I'm going to try and give you as many possible solutions as I could find. If you run into a different issue not mentioned here, feel free to post a comment and let us know.
It's also worth noting that you can't install Office 2013 on Windows Vista or Windows XP, it's just not possible. You'll get an error message like:
This is not a valid Win32 application
or
We are sorry, you couldn't install your Office product because you don't have a modern Windows operating system. You need Microsoft windows 7 (or newer) to install this product
or
The procedure entry point K32GetProcessImageFileNameW could not be located in the dynamic link library KERNERL32.dll
Now let's talk about some of the problems that can occur when installing Office 2013 on Windows 7 and Windows 8.
FIX "SOMETHING WENT WRONG" OFFICE 2013
You might get this error if a first installation stalled and you ended up starting a second installation over the first one. You might also get this error if the computer restarted for some reason before the installation was finished. In this case, you should go to the Control Panel, click on Microsoft Office 2013 or Microsoft Office 365 and click on Change.
Office 2013 change - www.office.com/setup Blogs
Depending on your version of Office installed, you should either see an option called Repair or Online Repair. If you have Office 365, you'll see Online Repair and then the Repair option.
Office 2013 repair - www.office.com/setup Blogs
If, for some reason, this fails or