Get notified about user name conflicts in Apple Business Manager
In Apple Business Manager, you can be notified about federated authentication user name conflicts in case you need to tell specific users to create new user name information. After a domain is successfully verified and federated, Apple searches through all existing Apple IDs to find one that uses that specific domain name. If one is found, Apple Business Manager lets you notify that person—and any device connected to their iCloud account—to update their personal Apple ID user name so you can use it for your organization. Even though they update their user name, they don’t have to change their password, and all their purchases and data remain in their account.
For example, say your organization registered the domain @theacmeinc.com several years ago and set up email addresses for all their users. Amy Frost decided to use the email address she was assigned “afrost@theacmeinc.com” as her personal Apple ID.
Even if Amy no longer works for the organization that registered theacmeinc.com, she still has the personal Apple ID with that domain name. Because you’re setting up federated authentication for the domain name @theacmeinc.com, Amy must change her personal Apple ID user name so that you can create the Managed Apple ID afrost@theacmeinc.com if you want.
How Apple notifies users whose Apple ID conflicts
Apple will identify users whose personal Apple ID contains the domain name you’ve registered. Those users receive a mail message and a notification telling them they must rename their personal Apple ID. If they’ve not renamed their personal Apple ID yet, they keep receiving notifications and mail messages, with one final mail message at 60 days. After 60 days, the user’s personal Apple ID is automatically renamed to a temporary user name, and the original user name is released and claimed by your organization.
Get notified about federated authentication user name conflicts
In Apple Business Manager , sign in with a user that has the role of Administrator or People Manager.
Tap Activity in the sidebar, then look for any activity named “X Conflicts found,” where X is the number of conflicts.
Tap the activity, then review the domain these Apple IDs are using.
Tap Preferences to go to the Accounts section under Preferences, then tap Edit next to Domains.
Look for the domain with the conflicts, then tap “X User Name Conflicts,” where X is the number of conflicts.
WARNING: Be aware that sending notifications will impact all users across the domain you federate. You should speak with your IT administrator before initiating the federation process.
Tap Continue, tap Send Notifications, then tap OK.
A mail message—and a notification to any device connected to their iCloud account—is sent, letting each user with a user name conflict know they must change their personal Apple ID. The notification may be immediate or it may take some time.
You can view the process of sending mail messages to users with a user name conflict in the Activity section of Apple Business Manager but you can’t see their actual personal Apple ID.