Microsoft Copilot $21 now $18/user/month + 1 month free

April 4, 2014

How-To Add a Microsoft Dynamics GP User

Our Technical Project Manager Mike Zapp offers a step-by-step guide to adding a new Dynamics GP User. There are actually three steps involved: 1- Add the user name/password, 2- Give the user access to one or more companies, 3- Set the user’s security role in each company they access.  The creator MUST be logged into Dynamics GP as the ‘sa’ user and the System password will be required to access these windows (assuming a System password is being used).

Technically, there is a method around being ‘sa’, but that’s another topic and an exception to standard protocol which must be reviewed for security compliance.

Microsoft-Dynamics-GP

Window Access- Tools–>Setup–>System–>Users

  1. Enter the User ID, Name and Password.  Try to keep to naming standards such as ‘first initial/last name’.
  2. Enter a User Class if classes are being used.
  3. Assign the user to a Home Page Role based on their expected usage of Dynamics GP.
  4. Select the User Type.
  5. Use Advanced SQL Server options depending on the system schema of the network.

Use the window below to create Class ID’s if needed.

Window Access: Click on drilldown label ‘Class ID’ or use menu Tools–>Setup–>System–>User Classes

STEP TWO:

Window Access:  Tools–>Setup–>System–>User Access

6. Highlight the User on the left and click the box for each company to give the user login rights for that company.

STEP THREE:

Window Access:  Tools–>Setup–>System–>User Security

7.  Select the User and Company at the top of the screen

8. Click the box for each security role the user will perform.  For details on the role’s tasks, use the Security Roles window   on the Setup–>System menu to see the tasks for the role.  Use the Security Tasks window to see the specific details a task can perform.

9. Assign the user to an Alternate/Modified Forms and Reports profile.  These profiles determine which modified windows and  reports the user will be able to access.  They must have rights to the original reports before they can be assigned to a modified version.  Reporting access is defined within the security role.

Mike Zapp Microsoft Dynamics GP ConsultantMike Zapp is a Microsoft Dynamics® Certified Professional at Bond Consulting Services with 20+ years work experience.

Share On: 

Other articles

Why Waiting for Perfect Data Means Never Starting with AI

Zoltan Orban

|

February 10, 2026
This post is part of our Microsoft Copilot, Explained series, which starts with everyday productivity tools like email and meetings before expanding into broader workflows and AI agents."Our data isn't…

Just Get Started: How Teams Are Actually Beginning with Microsoft Copilot

Clayton Jones

|

February 5, 2026
Getting started with Microsoft Copilot doesn't require perfect data, months of planning, or enterprise-scale resources. Small and medium-sized businesses running Microsoft 365 and Dynamics 365 Business Central are finding that…

Why Copilot in Outlook Beats Standalone AI Email Tools

Joel Trinidad

|

February 4, 2026
This post is part of our Microsoft Copilot, Explained series, which starts with everyday productivity tools like email and meetings before expanding into broader workflows and AI agents.Tools like ChatGPT…

Microsoft Copilot vs Copilot Chat vs Full Copilot

Joel Trinidad

|

February 3, 2026
This post is part of a series, Microsoft Copilot, Explained, which begins with productivity tools and building toward business workflows and AI agents. If you’ve been hearing more about Microsoft Copilot…

Microsoft Copilot for Operations vs Executives: Same Tool, Different Value

Zoltan Orban

|

January 29, 2026
Most conversations about AI in business stay at a high level: “It will transform how we work.”That might be true, but as someone who spends most days in the details—fixing…

Dynamics 365 Real-Time Journeys Explained: The “For Dummies” Version

Jackie Gant

|

January 26, 2026
Remember those bright yellow For Dummies books from the 2000s? This post is a throwback in that spirit: plain language, no fluff. If you’ve been hearing about Microsoft’s “Real-Time Journeys”…