DayBack can be added to your Salesforce Lightning Experience in a variety of ways. In addition to Standard Lightning Tabs, DayBack can also be set-up in Lighting Console Apps and as a Utility Item, which we’ll be looking at in this article. (DayBack can also be set-up as a component on a Lighting record page […]
Using Salesforce Attendees and Google Notifications in DayBack
Part 3 of 3 on creating attendees, invitations, and accepting invitations in DayBack. In two previous articles, we looked at using DayBack to send Google notifications from any calendar and using DayBack to share events in Salesforce using the event’s Attendees relationship. In this article, we’re going to combine these two techniques and send Google email notifications to our Salesforce […]
Attendees & Shared Events in Salesforce Calendars
Part 2 of 3 on creating attendees, invitations, and accepting invitations in DayBack. In Salesforce, the standard Event object supports a single owner by default. In DayBack, it’s typical to map the owner of the standard Event as the resource so individuals in the organization have their own row or column in DayBack’s resource scheduling grids. […]
Sending Google Calendar Notifications from DayBack
Part 1 of 3 on creating attendees, invitations, and accepting invitations in DayBack. Why Use Google to Send Notifications? Email notifications were built into Salesforce Classic, but they’re getting harder to do in Lightning. Having Google Calendar send notifications for your Salesforce events is a great alternative. Even FileMaker developers, who have always been able to […]
Using DayBack with Salesforce Lightning Scheduler Part 2 – Appointment Availability
This is the second in a series of posts integrating DayBack Calendar with the Salesforce Lightning Scheduler app. In part one, we looked at how to customize DayBack to reflect Lightning Scheduler’s data model. This article will examine how to display a particular Service Resource’s availability in DayBack when scheduling a Service Appointment. With this […]