Time elapsed from Order to receipt/payment Which vendor bill should I settle first (or which vendor relationships/ products are strategic to our relationship?) Total taxes owed to statutory bodies and when must I pay Which bill should I pay (and which ones can we delay) Vendors who consistently deliver late to us Most frequently purchased products (and vendors from whom we buy) Purchase Order line charge, Purchase Order line Tax, Contact, Vendor Total taxes owed to various statutory bodies We buy a lot! – are we getting good discounts from our vendors ? are we shipping some products always late?) Order lines with Partial (or delayed) shipments (ie. Sales invoice line, Sales invoice, Sales Order, Sales invoice charge, Sales invoice Tax, Account, ContactĪre we offering larger than usual Discounts to specific accounts or products? Orders where we have partial (or delayed) shipmentsĮstimated opportunity vs. Sales Order, Sales Order line, Sales Order line charge, Sales Order line Tax, Sales order line shipment, Product, Opportunity, Account Value of Sales Orders at hand compared to the estimated value of Opportunity Sales Order, Sales Order charge, Sales Order Tax, Worker, Contact, Opportunity, AccountĪre our Sales Orders coming from a specific customer segment or a region? A perspective offers a “view into data” from a reporting point of view.Īt the time of launch, we have categorized the entities in to 10 perspectives as follows.Įxamples of business questions that can be answered using the perspective To make it easier to report on a given business question or a subject area, we have organized entities into a set of ready-made subject areas called Perspectives. While CDS contains a rich set of entities representing many business areas, as a Report writer, you may be interested in creating reports by focusing on a business question or a subject area. Entities are presented by subject areas (perspectives) For an example, when you report using an address field, Power BI shows a map as a default visualization. These types are recognized by Power BI as first class data types. In addition to rich types, makers can also define a list of values, called picklists. Power BI is aware of rich data types and relationships defined in CDSĬDS enables makers to define rich data types such as Address, Boolean, and Currency when you add fields to an entity. You do not need to secure data explicitly within Power BI. As an author, when you share reports with your peers in, your peers can only see the data they are allowed to access in CDS. As an author writing Power BI reports, you can only report against the entities to which you have been granted access in CDS. When you secure CDS entities using policies for a set of users, the same permissions are applied to Power BI reports. Power BI respects security policies defined in CDS You can interactively explore CDS data using the capabilities of Power BI. When the data is updated in CDS, changes are reflected in reports. There’s no need to schedule a refresh in Power BI. Important: This feature was available initially as preview to selected customers (or databases, more accurately) based in USA. The PowerApps CDS connector enables you to leverage key features built into CDS and PowerApps in Power BI. Power BI is intimately aware of PowerApps and CDS.
#KAHUNA RICH PUSH INTEGRATION GUIDE UPDATE#
If you have downloaded the February update of Power BI desktop, you already have access to the connector. We have worked very closely with Power BI team to develop this connector.
#KAHUNA RICH PUSH INTEGRATION GUIDE FULL#
Using the full power of Power BI, you can then go on to create and share stunning dashboards with users in your organization. You can now create rich reports with the data in CDS using Power BI desktop, the authoring tool for Power BI. Today we are pleased to announce the availability of Power Apps Common Data Service (CDS) connector to Power BI desktop as a preview.