- Module 1: Extend Microsoft Dataverse interaction to external and internal audiences such as customers, partners, and employees. Use portals to set up an interactive, web-based sales, services, support, and social engagement application platform to connect with customers, engage with communities, manage site content, and empower your channel partners. Empower anyone inside or outside your organization to interact with Dataverse data by using portals.
- Identify the capabilities of portal solutions.
- Review the portal provisioning process.
- Learn about Power Apps portals core components and tools.
- Discover how to control user access to portal content and Dataverse data.
- Module 2: Dynamics 365 starter portals are pre-configured portal solutions that are available to help accelerate deployment. Typical portal projects will have unique requirements, but a starter portal provides an environment that is immediately suitable for specific scenarios and audiences.
- Identify the features of the Community portal.
- Discover the features of the Customer self-service portal.
- Learn about the features of the Employee self-service portal.
- Review the features of the Partner portal.
- Identify the features of the Portal from blank.
- Learn about licensing requirements when portals are used by employees.
- Learn about the process to incorporate specific features from different starter portals to another portal type or the custom portal.
- Module 3: Power Apps portals provide a common set of core features to app makers to build powerful portal applications. Numerous Power Apps features map directly to Microsoft Dynamics 365 apps that are specific to particular business requirements and external audiences. Other Dynamics 365 applications, such as Marketing and Supply Chain Management, also use components of portals or alternate technologies.
- Identify the core features of Power Apps portals apps.
- Describe the specific portal features of Microsoft Dynamics 365 apps.
- Discover alternate portal technologies that are available on Power Platform.
- Learn to incorporate specific features from different portal templates to another portal type or the Portal from blank feature.
- Module 4: This module focuses on the Power Apps portals architecture, such as how the various components work together to build a portal. Additionally, it explains how the components are installed and come to together in a working portal. The module also describes the maker and configuration tools that you can use to build and customize Power Apps portals.
- Identify the key components of the Power Apps portals architecture.
- Learn about the portal provisioning process.
- Differentiate the various maker tools, their purposes, and when to use each particular tool.
- Module 5: Portal makers spend the majority of their time configuring portals by using Microsoft Power Apps portals Studio. It is important that portal makers have a full understanding of the capabilities and also the limitations of using portals Studio. This module will focus on understanding and using Power Apps portals Studio to create and customize portal websites. Power Apps portals Studio allows makers to add and configure webpages, layout components, static content, custom CSS files, table lists, and table forms.
- Learn how to launch and run Power Apps portals Studio from the maker portal.
- Identify the various menus, command bars, tools, canvas, and property sections.
- Discover how to add new webpages, how to place them in the site structure, and how to apply various page templates.
- Learn about the process of configuring specific layouts and adding and modifying different types of content to a page.
- Identify where to add or modify custom HTML, CSS, or Liquid code to the webpages by using portals Studio.
- Discover the process of uploading CSS files and how it will apply to the portal.
In this module, you will:
In this module, you will:
In this module, you will:
In this module, you will:
In this module, you will: