Group Policy Object
/ˌdʒiː-piː-ˈoʊ/
n. “The rulebook for computers in a Windows network.”
GPO, short for Group Policy Object, is a feature of Active Directory in Microsoft Windows environments that allows administrators to centrally manage and configure operating system settings, application behaviors, and user permissions across multiple computers and users in a domain.
Key aspects of GPO include:
Customer Relationship Management
/ˌsiː-ɑːr-ˈɛm/
n. “Know your customers. Keep them close, and make them happier.”
CRM, short for Customer Relationship Management, is a suite of strategies, tools, and technologies designed to help organizations manage interactions with current and potential customers. At its core, CRM is about collecting, organizing, and leveraging data to build stronger, more informed relationships while improving customer satisfaction, retention, and sales performance.
Group-Policy
/ɡruːp ˈpɒl-ɪ-si/
n. “Control the chaos, centrally.”
Group Policy is a Microsoft Windows feature that allows administrators to centrally manage and configure operating systems, applications, and user settings across multiple computers in an Active Directory environment. Think of it as a command center for IT: rather than touching each workstation individually, you set rules once, and they propagate automatically.