Related Articles
Newsletter
Join our blog
Join other Azure, Power Platform and SQL Server pros by subscribing to our blog.
Start with the FREE community plan and get your lifetime access to 20+ courses. Get Instant Access Now!
Need help? Talk to an expert: (904) 638-5743
Private Training
Customized training to master new skills and grow your business.
On-Demand Learning
Beginner to advanced classes taught by Microsoft MVPs and Authors.
Bootcamps
In-depth boot camps take you from a novice to mastery in less than a week.
Season Learning Pass
Get access to our very best training offerings for successful up-skilling.
Stream Pro Plus
Combine On-Demand Learning platform with face-to-face Virtual Mentoring.
Certification Training
Prepare and ace your next certification with CertXP.
Private Training
Cheat Sheets
Quick references for when you need a little guidance.
Nerd Guides
Summaries developed in conjunction with our Learn with the Nerds sessions.
Downloads
Digital goodies - code samples, student files, and other must have files.
Blog
Stay up-to-date on all things Power BI, Power Apps, Microsoft 365 and Azure.
Community Discord Server
Start here for technology questions to get answers from the community.
Career Guides
Breaking into the field? Let these guides help get you started with a plan.
Affiliate Program
Earn money by driving sales through the Pragmatic Works' Training Affiliate Program.
Reseller Partner
It's time to address your client's training needs.
Foundation
Learn how to get into IT with free training and mentorship.
Management Team
Discover the faces behind our success: Meet our dedicated team
Contact Us
How can we help? Connect with Our Team Today!
FAQs
Find all the information you’re looking for. We’re happy to help.
Today I’d like to talk about integration with Azure Logic Apps and how they can help your organization to do enterprise integration. Logic Apps is similar to Flow, but is an Azure tool, as opposed to an Office 365 tool. Logic Apps allows you to integrate a variety of apps, such as Salesforce, Office 365, SQL Server, Azure Event Hubs, etc. You can create interactions to allow these applications to integrate with each other.
As an integration tool, it’s typically triggered on a timer or by an action. For example, if you had an email from your boss come in that has “action required” in the subject line, you can have that action added automatically to your planner. What it does is interacts and moves data around with connectors that know how to connect between the apps, as well as what the APIs are; no need for custom work on your end.
As Logic Apps are like Flow, you could possibly start in Flow and upgrade to Logic Apps if that makes sense in a scenario. You do get more benefits when you use Logic Apps. With Logic Apps you get the ability to do custom development as needed. You can build and integrate yourself by getting into the code page in Logic Apps, which is not possible in Flow.
You also gain the ability to do source control. And it can be opened in Visual Studio, so when you go into Logic Apps you can use Team Foundation or another source control solution of your choice and be able to manage that project and source control around that.
Logic Apps does a much better job at supporting business to business type integrations, in scenarios where you want to trigger something based on what your partner in business is doing. Plus, it takes advantage of the security model since it’s an Azure tool. If you’re actively using Flow and as that becomes more complex or you decide to have it become an enterprise managed resource, it makes sense to move over to Logic Apps to gain the control and leverage Azure security and auditing.
If you have more questions about how to leverage Logic Apps within your enterprise for this type of integration, click the link below or contact us. We are your resource on any Azure topic and we’d love to help.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Free Trial
private training
Newsletter
Join other Azure, Power Platform and SQL Server pros by subscribing to our blog.
Leave a comment