If you're not familiar with XSLT then I would highly recommend picking up a copy of Altova MapForce. You can get the standard version for US$ 269 which allows you to graphically map from one schema definition to another and then generate the XSLT required to do the mappings. There is a fully functional 30-day trial if you would like to try it out first.<br /><br />Once you have your XSLT ready, drag and drop the XSLT Transform Service into your process. <br /><br />Here are a few tips:<br /><br />- Leave the Factory Name blank. You need only specify this parameter if you would to change the factory being used.<br />- The XML Source should be the source of the XML that you would like to be input into your transformation process (NOT THE LIST, a single XML document or a document in your list)<br />- The transformation result is the XML variable for your output.<br />- For the XSLT Source, click on the properties of the literal value and you'll be provide with a window that lets you paste in the appropriate XSLT, another for some test XML, and a result Window to show you how the service will operate.<br /><br />If you do run into problems, use the Variable Logger to see what your XML data looks like prior to running the transformation service and copy the contents of your XML input variable into the XSLT service test window. Make sure this works before testing the whole process.<br /><br />If you run into an output error, remove the entire "<xsl:output...>" line from the XSLT generated by MapForce.