![]() I can then use the recorded answers as things to review with my therapist as needed.) ![]() I'm actually using Forms to give myself a link that is on my phone home page, and I can just click on it - like it's an app - when I'm having anxious thoughts. Journaling (I struggle with Anxiety and something that helps me is to force myself to ask myself prompts when I get anxious thoughts. I could have directed them to a form to fill out with all the info I needed to launch an ad.) Team requests (Wish I had this a few years ago when I was getting ad requests from my teammates. Order management (Keep track of requests for stickers, ) New contacts (I recommend using this together with the Crmble power-up that will help you with reporting and other aspects of contact management!) Here are a few that come to mind, but I'm sure you can think of others. I can see so much potential for this power-up, and if you have any use case where you want to get info in Trello without requiring someone to create a card, THIS is your solution. (No worries if you don't have that, because you can still send all the data to the card title and description, and I'll show you the nice headers that are added so it looks as clean as possible even if you have a lot of form fields. If you're on Trello Standard or Higher, you'll have access to custom fields, which means you can store some of that info there instead of cluttering up the card description. additional way to be contacted if follow up questions Here's what I landed on for my topic suggestion/voting: Think about any questions you might want to ask, or what kind of data you're currently putting on your cards when a new request comes in. Sticking with my example, I need to think about what kind of data I want to have on each card. ![]() Next, decide on what kind of information you want your cards to have. Don't worry - it doesn't matter which plan of Trello you're on or how many power-ups you have already because every plan of Trello now allows an unlimited number of Power-Ups ! To get started, all you need to do is add the power-up to your board. For this example use case, I'm going to show how I use Forms for Trello to allow people to submit ideas for what they want me to write about on this blog! Setting up Forms on Trello I'll walk you through how to set this up on your boards, and then I'll explain a couple of ways I'm planning to use this. Although it wasn't exactly difficult, it did require someone to be comfortable with other tools and never felt truly native to Trello. ![]() Previously to achieve this, you'd have to create a form in another place (like Typeform or Google forms) and then use a Power-Up or another integration (like Zapier) to get that form data to Trello. For instance, you can add attachments, you can map dates to the start or due date fields, and maybe even the coolest part - you can map your form answers to specific custom fields on your card. And sometimes I don't want to give a million people access to my board.īlue Cat Reports just released a new power-up called " Forms " that lets you create a form from inside Trello and map out the form fields to specific elements in your Trello card. Īt long last, a feature I've been dying to have it finally available in Trello as Power-Up! I've always wanted a way to get new info in Trello from a form fill, because as much as I wish someone could fill out a templated Trello card, sometimes it's just too much for people. Update! I’ve created a short video demo to go along with this. ![]()
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