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Anyway to have the system automatically email a report to specified user(s) daily?
Our techs really like the Calendar->Appointments report for the day. Easy PDF they can reference throughout. Anyway to automate this? I guess I hope native syncing with Google Calendar is on the list as it might make this a moot point. However I'm there are many other reports that would be nice daily/weekly/monthly. Thanks. |
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Joshua,
Reports are only sent automatically to customers when a Ticket is opened/closed. Currently you cannot set the system to send weekly Calendar reports automatically, though you can sync your data with Outlook and have it synced with the technicians mobile devices (or if you use Google Calendar, have it sync with their Outlook - it now holds the RangerMSP data). A direct sync with Google Calendar is on our list indeed. Hope this helps, Dina |
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Dina,
Yes, we synced to Outlook, then to Google, but is a pain, and unreliable solution, requiring the PC, Outlook, and CommitCRM to be open. Automated options for emailing reports would be a nice feature. Will you consider it? Monthly asset expiring report, charges by month by employee report (can't remember the name) would be nice, etc. |
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You could automate a report by using a macro recorder, maybe the free autohotkey program in an hour or two on a Saturday afternoon.....CommitCRM is running on a machine to sync and send alerts anyhow :) . I think there is a lot that could automated easily with a little work to the alert server. Features! Features! Features! That's what sells software.
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Thanks for the feedback. One note though - more features may sell more software however adding new features should be done very carefully or else you end up with a too complex system that nobody wants... So, the hard thing to do is to include new features in a way that does not make the system more complex.
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That's a bit disingenuous CommitCRM guys. The actual trick is making functioning software that is easy to use. It can still be ultra powerful. There's no problem with adding in more complex functionality as long as your user interface (menu options etc and ways to access these complex functions) is laid out in a clever way that doesn't confuse new users. Suggesting that you need to limit the software's functionality to continue to get new users is pretty backward thinking, but that mindset certainly does explain why it can take years before a feature is added!
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