By default, DayBack color-codes your events by their status: more precisely, by whatever you’ve mapped to the status field. Coloring by status makes sense since many of DayBack’s scheduling views already put events into their own columns or rows by resources. But if you’d like to add a second color for the event’s resource, you […]
Resource scheduling
Cascading Events – Link Events Together on Your Calendar
Cascading Events in DayBack When working with projects, many times you may have events with dependencies. If one event’s scheduled time changes, you probably want any dependent events in the future to adjust accordingly. DayBack’s custom event actions allow you to have that kind of automated control over your events. I’ve put together a custom […]
Drag Resources & Statuses
The latest update to DayBack Calendar helps you organize your calendars by dragging resources (and resource folders) into the order that makes sense for you. Note that the resource columns reflect your changes and appear in the same order as your resources in the sidebar. Resources are people, trucks, rooms, or business processes–anything in your […]
Color-Code Your Schedule by Status and Resource
Color-Coding by a Second Field Here’s a beautiful example of adding additional color-coding options and icons to DayBack Calendar. This customer wanted to retain DayBack’s default color-coding for status but add another color–shown here as the header of the event–for color-coding by resource (salesperson, in this case). They also wanted some icons to highlight a few […]
Calendar Analytics
Calendar Analytics lets you measure your schedule. Plot progress against your goals over time, balance your workload, and quickly see patterns that are invisible in traditional reports. Availability Calendar Analytics is available in all DayBack sources, not just for Salesforce. We’ve been using analytics internally for a few months now and are impressed with how it’s […]