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Supercharging Productivity with Trello

You're reading from  Supercharging Productivity with Trello

Product type Book
Published in Aug 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781801813877
Pages 342 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Author (1):
Brittany Joiner Brittany Joiner
Profile icon Brittany Joiner

Table of Contents (20) Chapters

Preface 1. Part 1 – Trello Foundation
2. Chapter 1: The Structure of Trello 3. Chapter 2: Trello Card Starter Pack 4. Chapter 3: Leveling Up Your Cards 5. Chapter 4: Viewing Cards Your Way 6. Chapter 5: Real World Trello Boards 7. Part 2 – Automation in Trello
8. Chapter 6: Initiating Trello Automations 9. Chapter 7: Common Automation Actions 10. Chapter 8: Advanced Actions 11. Chapter 9: Building Automation with Triggers 12. Chapter 10: Date-Based Automation 13. Part 3 – Power Up Your Boards
14. Chapter 11: Power-Ups Built by Trello 15. Chapter 12: General-Use Power-Ups 16. Chapter 13: Syncing Info Between Boards and Tools 17. Chapter 14: Reporting in Trello 18. Index 19. Other Books You May Enjoy

Button automation

Sometimes you can’t quite put your finger on when you need to trigger automation. For instance, maybe it’s not every time a card is moved to another list, just sometimes. Or maybe you don’t always want to convert all the checklist items to cards, but you also don’t want to have to manually do it for each item either.

This is where buttons come in handy. You can add buttons to your cards and your board so that you decide when the automation happens, and then Trello takes over from there.

When to use button automation

Use buttons when you have a series of actions you want to automate but there are no consistent criteria for when you need it triggered. Or use it when you just prefer to have the control of clicking a button to make a series of actions happen! I know some people who use card buttons to move a card to another list, even though you can drag it or select the Move action on a card.

This can be useful if you’re...

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