We have two products that serve fairly similar needs:
Teams is hosted directly on stackoverflow.com. Enterprise is either self-hosted or on a service such as AWS or Azure. Due to the overhead of supporting Enterprise instances and the importance of having a critical mass of users, we only offer Enterprise for organizations of 500 or more. Because Enterprise is a dedicated instance for each customer, we can support SSO. Since Teams are hosted on the Stack Overflow directly they use the same credentials as the public site and SSO isn't supported today.
The main reason we don't sell Enterprise to small customers is that it needs a certain critical mass to be successful. We estimate based on past experience that 500 people is approximately the minimum needed. But Teams works for smaller groups because many developers visit Stack Overflow regularly and will see questions from their own Team right there. As nice as SSO can be, having all your programming questions in the same place is arguably even better. (And if you already have a Stack Overflow login, there's little benefit to adding another one for your company's benefit.)
Being completely transparent, one of the reasons we have two tiers of products is segmentation. Large organizations are willing to pay more for features such as single sign-on (and probably wouldn't buy the product at all without it). Conversely, most smaller organizations (who Teams is aimed at) tend to care less about that feature and don't want to pay Enterprise prices for the privilege. As it happens, building SSO support into Enterprise required considerable effort and cost. Ironically, there are many different single sign-on systems and none of them work exactly the same way.
All that said, we are working on adding SSO to Teams since this is something other potential customers have asked for. We'll be sure to let everyone know the details when it's ready!
The email you got was part of our first ever customer advocacy program. The idea is that people who already use a product are likely to recommend it to others. We sent that email to people who had opted in to recieve research emails as well as some Teams users. It certainly wasn't our intention to ask you to advocate for a product we wouldn't sell you. I'm sorry for the confusion it caused. I can see how it might be like rubbing salt in a wound.