One common scenario for Microsoft Flow is copying data between two different data sources. For example, if you have a SharePoint list in one site, and you want all of the items to be copied over to a second SharePoint site, you can build flows to do that.
You can now build flows that have two (or more) steps run simultaneously. With this capability, you can send an approval to two people in parallel and have the workflow continue once both approvals have been completed.
This week, we’re excited to introduce Richard Hills from 10to8 – a powerful appointment management, communications and online bookings system. Richard and his team built their own connector for Microsoft Flow.
Are you attending Microsoft Build 2017 in Seattle? If yes, the product team would like to meet you to discuss feedback, offer answers, or any other topic of interest. Please register by filling this survey: https://www.surveybuilder.com/s/G7f3j.
Using Flow and Power BI to track social listening through Twitter
April and May Webinars: Flow Approvals, InfoPath migration, Microsoft Flow for Business Analysts, Deploying PowerApps and meet one of the developers
We, on the product team, often hear from many of you about how incredibly powerful Flow is. Some of you, however, have told us that the designer is difficult to navigate and you prefer to use our one-click templates instead.
With our modern approvals experiences, you can quickly create an approval workflow for your data in SharePoint, Dynamics CRM, Twitter, Visual Studio Team Services, MailChimp and many others.
In Q1 of 2017, Microsoft Flow rapidly delivered new functionality and iterated with customers.
In this post, we’ll walk through a new hire onboarding scenario. We’ll use Flow to manage new hire information in Excel and SharePoint, then send emails to department heads when their employees are ready to start.
We’re thrilled to announce that Freakonomics authors Steven Levitt and Stephen Dubner will join us for a special guest keynote at Microsoft Data Insights Summit, taking place June 12–13, 2017 in Seattle.
This week we have a number of new features that make Microsoft Flow more capable than ever. First, you can now generate HTML or CSV tables from lists in flow, in order to easily send an email digest with a summary of information.