Questionnaire activity
Collects inputs from a user during a playbook run to use later in the playbook.
The questionnaire activity
replaces the Collect User Data activity, but does not require you to create a data definition. Use the questionnaire activity if:
- You don't have a table already,
- You don't need to run reports on the collected data,
- And you don't need to use the data outside of the playbook.
Roles and availability
This activity is available as a common activity. Users with the admin, playbook.admin, or pd_author can add this activity to a playbook.
During a playbook run, you can use data definitions to potentially:
- Collect a shipping address, then reference the address when generating a shipping label.
- Ask the user "yes" or "no" questions, and determine subsequent activities based on the user's responses.
Common properties
These properties are common to all to activities in Playbooks.
Open the activity properties panel and configure your activity to add values for the following inputs. If the input value varies, use the pill-picker to show where to get the
value. To learn more about the pill-picker, see Dot-walking examples.
| Input | Type | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Label | String | Title to display as activity and playbook card. |
| Description | String | Information to display about activity usage or outcome. |
| Run condition | Condition Builder | Conditions that must be met to run an activity or stage. You can use data from prior activities to build conditions. 주: Select Show additional options to see this field. |
| Start Rule | Choice | Under , select a start rule for when your stage should start running:
|
| Start with delay | True/False | Option to wait for a duration of time before running an activity or stage. When enabled, this input displays the Start with delay input properties. 주: Select Show additional options to see this field. |
Questionnaire
In the Questionnaire tab, you can:
- Add questions for agents to respond to,
- Edit existing questionnaires.
Inputs
Many of these inputs are common to activities in Playbooks.
After configuring the required inputs for your activity, you can also choose to configure additional inputs. In the side panel, select Show additional
options to display these advanced inputs. For more information, see Activity experience.
| Input | Type | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Assignment Group for this Process Step | Reference.Group [sys_user_group] | Assignment group allowed to perform this playbook activity. If you don't set any values for Assignment Group or Assigned To, any user can read and edit the collected
data. The Assignment group and Assigned to fields limit who has access to do so. To specify only individual users, use the Assigned To field. The same users do not need to be specified in both
fields. 주: By default, these fields are mapped to the Assignment Group and Assigned To fields of the trigger record. This means that users assigned to work on the
parent record have access to submit, view and edit the collected data by default. |
| Assigned to this Process Step | Reference.User [sys_user] | User allowed to perform this playbook activity. If you don't set any values for Assignment Group or Assigned To, any user can read and edit the collected data. The
Assignment group and Assigned to fields limit who has access to do so. To specify only individual users, use the Assigned To field. The same users do not need to be specified in both
fields. 주: By default, these fields are mapped to the Assignment Group and Assigned To fields of the trigger record. This means that users assigned to work on the
parent record have access to submit, view and edit the collected data by default. |
Outputs
These outputs can provide data to other activities in your playbook. You can access this data as activity inputs when you configure your activity:
| Output | Type | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Record | Reference.Flow Data | Reference to record containing collected data. Use the pill-picker to dot-walk to to see all collected data. To learn more about the pill-picker, see Dot-walking examples. |