This new initiative was inspired by an identical program from other Experience League Communities (e.g. Adobe Target Coffee Break). The Coffee Break is a live, text-only 1-hour Community Q&A session where an Adobe subject-matter expert will be on call to answer any question you may have on a preselected topic theme.
For our inaugural session, we'll be joined by @CynthiaBoon, Customer Success Manager for Adobe Workfront, who will be signed into the Adobe Workfront Community to answer any and all questions you have about: being a New System Administrator for Adobe Workfront.
Some example questions you can ask Cynthia include:
If you're a more advanced Workfront user, you're also welcome! Feel free to drop in and add your own thoughts and opinions! We'd love to hear your tips, tricks, and best practices for new system administrators.
HOW TO PARTICIPATE
INSTRUCTIONS
Cynthia Boon is a Business Process Professional dedicated to process improvement, building efficiencies and implementing innovations to help organization achieve strategic goals. With 20 years of project support and implementation, she has had the opportunity to serve as technical writer, training facilitator, instructional designer, performance consultant, project manager, product owner and systems administrator.
I also have my own project to track onboarding tasks for each new hire within my team where I use a parent task with the persons name and title and subtasks for the steps I need to go through with each new hire.
Thanks so much for sharing these, Rhonda! Super helpful as we're working on developing on onboarding and training plan now.
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Hi Anderson,
Great question!
One piece of general advice: it doesn't hurt to create just one general welcome message/welcome training for everyone if we think about the more knowledge users have, the better, regardless of their user access levels.
However, I understand where this comes from if you want to avoid confusion and make sure users only see relevant information based on their access levels.
If you are using groups, then you can leverage group access.
If you are not using groups you may have to create groups based on whatever buckets of users you have, for example: a group based on license types.
Once you do that, you can create any type of objects, for example projects that are limited to the access levels.
This way you could create a project labelled "Welcome" for each specific group, so only reviewers can see the "welcome" project for reviewers as an example.
Thanks for setting this up @jon_chen and @CynthiaBoon,
I'm going to sign off now, but for feedback, should you decide to run one again, and for those who missed this one...
Regards,
Doug
P.S. ehm....I keep real-time alerts turned on for experience league, so (looking at the deluge in my inbox) if one of your goals by running this session today was to make it obvious that there was lots of chatter happening, "mission accomplished"
Hey @Doug_Den_Hoed__AtAppStore ,
Thanks so much for your feedback! Please see my comments below:
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Hi everyone! That hour went fast! This was our first Q&A Coffee Break, so we're just testing out the format.
We would love your feedback! (And thank you Doug for your feedback.
Here is a survey link to share how we can improve this experience as well as what topics you might want to discuss. (Again - I'm hoping for an Agile or Boards discussion next time!
https://survey.adobe.com/jfe/form/SV_1TGFzgc9qDhryXc
We have several in-person events this week as well, so check them out if you have time. See you soon!
https://experienceleague.adobe.com/events/?lang=en
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