In the first part of this series, we covered the basics of Windows 365, licensing, and the differences between Business and Enterprise.
Now it’s time to actually build a Windows 365 Enterprise environment.
Unlike Windows 365 Business, the Enterprise edition gives administrators much more control over:
The tradeoff is simple:
more flexibility also means more configuration.
In this post, I’ll walk through the core components required to successfully deploy Windows 365 Enterprise using Microsoft Intune.
I’ll cover:
A Windows 365 Enterprise deployment consists of several components working together:
At a high level, the provisioning flow looks like this:
From an administrator perspective, most of the work happens before the first Cloud PC is created.
Good preparation prevents most provisioning failures later on.
Before configuring anything, validate the following requirements.
At minimum you need:
In most modern environments, this is already enough to start deploying Cloud PCs relatively quickly.
One of the biggest advantages of Windows 365 Enterprise is that administrators can keep the deployment relatively straightforward while still maintaining enterprise-grade management capabilities.
Provisioning policies define how Cloud PCs are created. Think of them as the deployment blueprint. A provisioning policy controls:
Without a provisioning policy, no Cloud PCs will be created.
For most deployments, the default Microsoft-hosted networking configuration is more than sufficient and keeps the deployment process much simpler.



Windows 365 supports multiple image options.
Microsoft provides prebuilt images including:
These are the easiest to maintain and are ideal for most deployments.
Organizations can also deploy their own images.
This is useful for:
My recommendation:
Start with gallery images unless there is a strong business reason not to.
Custom images increase operational overhead quickly.

Once the provisioning policy is configured, assignments determine who receives a Cloud PC. Typically this is done using:
As soon as:
the Cloud PC deployment starts automatically.
Provisioning usually takes between 20 minutes to several hours, depending on:

After provisioning completes, the Cloud PC automatically enrolls into Intune. From there, it behaves almost like a normal Windows endpoint.
Administrators can deploy:
This is where Windows 365 becomes especially powerful for organizations already using Intune extensively.
The management experience is very familiar for endpoint administrators because most existing Intune workflows continue to work exactly the same.
I’ve seen the same problems come up again and again during deployments in recent months. I'll mention a few from my experiences.
Keep the initial deployment simple.
Do not immediately introduce:
Validate the platform first.
Heavy application deployments can slow down the user onboarding experience significantly.
Especially large Win32 apps may delay the first login experience.
Custom images sound attractive, but they also become operationally expensive.
Many organizations can achieve the same result using:
without maintaining image lifecycles manually.
A Cloud PC is still a Windows endpoint. Many existing Intune and security principles still apply.
Windows 365 Enterprise is relatively straightforward once the foundational components are designed correctly.
Most deployment challenges are not caused by Windows 365 itself, but by:
My recommendation is always: start simple, validate the platform, and scale gradually.
In the next part of this series, we’ll take a closer look at Cloud PC settings, management capabilities, and the options administrators have after deployment.
That is it for now. Until next time. 👋
Original Post https://www.burgerhout.org/windows-365-wednesdays-configuring-windows-365-enterprise/