As Microsoft Flow consumption increases in organizations, customers are looking for more insight into the health of flows running within their environment. To address this feedback, we recently launched Microsoft Flow Analytics in all Microsoft Flow regions.
This week we released several improvements to the Outlook connector, including saving an email as a “.eml” file, responding to calendar invitations automatically, and triggering flows when you are mentioned in an email thread.
As organizations focus on customer obsession, they need to scale their organization to exceed elevated customer expectations. It typically isn’t practical to meet this demand through additional headcount. The question becomes how can I scale my customer service department, without adding labor costs? The answer lies in the phrase “work smarter, not harder”.
Community Manager for PowerApps, Mackenzie Lyng teaches us how she created a Flow to automate sending a weekly report to the Social Media and Marketing team to streamline her process and save herself time!
The Flow Launch Panel is now available on all modern SharePoint lists and libraries. In this post, we’ll walk you through an example of how to create and customize a flow that uses the launch panel’s capabilities using the For a selected item trigger.
Out of the box, Microsoft Flow allows you to connect to many cloud-services. But what about your line-of-business systems? With a JSON-capable web service, your employees can use Flow to automate their processes without development skills. Come learn how to connect Flow, APIs, Azure AD and Office 365 in this demo-heavy session.
Starting this week you can now read data from, and write into, columns in SharePoint that use the Managed Metadata (aka. Taxonomy) type. You can now add items to the end of arrays using a new Append to array variable action.