Microsoft Power Automate is used to create an automated process that executes a task when an event is triggered. It can be connected to a number of different applications so that an event in one app will trigger output in another. Introduced in 2019, Power Automate has many additional features that make it an even more powerful admin tool. One of the most important of these features is the Robotic Process Automation (RPA), which has been specifically designed for legacy apps that have incomplete APIs, are not user friendly, or their APIs are unavailable from the start. This kind of powerful and user-friendly automation process that allows a multitude of user interactions like right and left mouse clicks, text inputs and keyboard actions to be recorded and made available to other applications on the cloud, is unique to Power Automate and makes it one of the most important tools of the Microsoft Power suite. Here is a simple guide for sysadmins and network administrators on how they can use Power Automation to create, scrutinize, and manage automated processes.

Types of workflows

Microsoft Power Automate supports the following types of workflows:

Automated flows

These are simple automated processes that execute a certain task once a specific predefined event occurs. 

Button flows

These are automated processes that execute an action repetitively. They can be triggered via mobile from anywhere, with the proper credentials.

Scheduled flows

These are tasks that are executed on a predefined schedule without user intervention or input.

Business process flows

Basically, these are human processes, and are meant as a guiding tool. They guide a user to a certain end via a number of predefined steps.

UI flows

These are the tasks that are connected to legacy apps with either missing or unavailable APIs.

Creating a basic flow using Microsoft Automate

There are a number of templates that will allow users to create flows. However, here we will guide you on how to create a flow from scratch. This simple example is a flow that will send a notification to the CEO of the organization whenever their name is mentioned on twitter. This kind of flow is very easy to create and has three basic steps, creating the event, creating the action, and managing the flow as given below.Microsoft Power Automate Before proceeding, sign in to the email service used by your organization and your Twitter account and connect both of them to Power Automate.

Creating UI flows using Microsoft Automate

One of the most important features of Power Automate is the ability to interact with legacy apps. Flows that are created for such apps are called UI flows. Here is a short introduction to the process of creating such flows. However, before creating UI flows, you will need to set up UI flows. To Setup UI flows on your machine, make sure that your machine is running either Windows 10 Pro or Windows Server (2016 or 2019) and you have Google Chrome 80+ or Microsoft Edge 80+ installed on your computer. UI flows will also require an environment with a Common Data Service database. You can find the UI flows setup file from Setup.Microsoft.PowerAutomate.UIflow.exe. You also need to install the required browser extension for the web browser that you use. Having met these prerequisites, follow the following steps. Please note that UI flows are a premium feature of Microsoft Automate. You can use this feature if you have a subscription of Microsoft 365. So there you have it. This easy to use guide gives you a complete walkthrough of using Power Automate with both modern apps as well as legacy apps, in order to automate a number of tasks. For me, creating flows was very similar to services like IFTTT and Zapier but if you are using the Microsoft ecosystem including Windows and Microsoft 365, Automate is the way to go as it has several pre-made templates for automating sysadmin and power user tasks easily. Also see:

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