Videos
We have included several different tours of Integrify® in 3 categories below - User Interface Tours, Administrative Tours and Extensibility Tours.
Feel free to select any of the online video tours that address your interest, offering a view inside some of Integrify®'s features for Lean BPM.
To discuss your process requirements or schedule a web demo, please email us at:
sales@integrify.com
User Interface Tours
See for yourself how easy it is for users to navigate the Integrify® Portal with these tours that show how users can submit requests, complete tasks and customize their portal.
Integrify Product Overview (4:20)
- Review End User Capabilities
- Configuring Processes and Tasks
- Creating Forms and Reports
Users submitting requests and completing tasks (3:18)
- Users starting a new request
- Users easily completing on-line forms
- Instant visibility into request status
- Take action on their open tasks
The Flexibility and Ease of the User Interface (3:03)
- Users adding tabs and widgets to their interface
- Saving filters for their tasks
- Mitigate requests as a process owner
- Review activity reports
Administrative Tours
The following tours show how you can define, change and manage your processes. We have included some process examples in order to show a few of the powerful features offered in Integrify®.
Pricing Discount Request (9:55)
- Using multiple forms in a single process
- Allowing a task to be re-assigned (ad-hoc)
- Defining task reminders and due dates
- Pre-filling form data with process information
Request for IT Services (11:37)
- Creating a new process within Integrify®
- Creating form and approval tasks for the process
- Changing recipients of the process tasks
- Defining routing rules based request type
New Hire Request (8:22)
- Defining tasks to be processed in parallel
- Hiding sensitive data in a form
- Routing a request back for more information
- Adding a new branch to a new hire process
Robust Report Creation (10:30)
- Ability to build your queries where are how you like them
- Run reports based on your form and process data
- Create queues that display unique views of open tasks for groups
Capital Expenditure (9:48)
- Creating and changing questions on a form
- Pulling data in from existing customer information
- Validating data in a form
- Defining approvals based on the total cost
Configuring User Portals (6:30)
- Users can have additional tabs and widgets of information defined in their Integrify® Portal
- These tabs and either internal or external widgets allow users to quickly filter to information
- Different interfaces can be defined for users or groups of users
Extensibility Tours
With the videos below, we've included some highlights of the flexibility of Integrify®. Check back, we'll add new videos showing more Plugins, Web Services capabilities, and the flexibility of Integrify® Widgets.
Excel Plugin (3:00)
- Upload an Excel spreadsheet into a process
- Define business rules based on data within the cells of the uploaded Excel document.
Grid Task Plugin (2:30)
- The Grid Task enables bi-directional capability to display, enter and update multiple database table records via a spreadsheet-like interface.
Database Push Plugin (2:30)
- Eliminate manual data entry between systems
- Push Integrify® process data directly any relational database
- Real-time updates can be pushed to a database for reporting
Database Pull Plugin (2:30)
- Eliminate manual data entry between systems
- Pull external data into an Integrify® process
- Build Integrify® reports using external database information
Dynamic Assigner Plugin (3:30)
- Ability to flexibly assign one-to-many approvers
- Build SQL statements that dynamically retrieves approvers
- Defining assignment conditions to those individuals
Launch Related Requests (3:30)
- The Launch Request task type allows for parent requests to launch related requests with unique request ID's and their own process definitions, either pre-defined in a parent process or ad-hoc. This task type can help simplify complex processes with multiple branches that need to execute seperately but still need to be related to a parent process.