 Shane says I'm working on a project that requires collecting feedback from a large team distributed across different departments. We use teams for communications and SharePoint for document management. I'm wondering how to create surveys with Microsoft forms, and then seamlessly, which I think is always going to be the keyword there, seamlessly integrates them with Teams and SharePoint for efficient data collection analysis. Are there any best practices or tips for ensuring smooth integration and effective data flow between these Microsoft services? Our automate, I actually wrote an entire video course on this because it is the most common question. Forms is great. You can export the data out to Excel, but it doesn't make it usable or consumable in a lot of different formats. If you need metrics around their responses, or you need to track or create dashboards or charts or all that, the ability to cross-post from a form into a SharePoint list and use that, or even a Dataverse table, if they're looking to capture it at a larger scale, you can create dashboards and reporting in metrics around that. I'll add to you might consider making this a group form. Sounds like it's such a large thing that you don't want to be the sole owner of this. In case you are out of the office, that you have other people that not only can be the ones that are editing it, but it can be managed within a team if you turn that into a group form. What Sherry is saying, of course, right now when you are looking at a form that's created, it's just downloading a local copy of the Excel workbook, which doesn't do any good. By using Power Automate and having that Excel workbook in the Cloud, then you definitely can have all that information flowing in there. You can even take that and put it into Power BI. If you wanted to have the dashboards or reports and I think that's what Sherry was going to as well that there's more robust capabilities there for you to be able to transform and visualize that data. Well, in workflows too, so if you're capturing business process information, you can build workflows around that, their notifications or their approvals that need to happen, does it trigger a whole nother workflow of something else? I'm not sure. Sorry, go ahead Sherry. I'm just going to say Power Automate. I'm not sure what Shane was asking also has to do with making the form available in certain places. So take a look to you at the ways that you can share the form. It's not just that URL or that short URL. You can also get a QR code if that's something that will be more placeable in areas that you wanted to go to or in bed code to be able to include that within websites or web pages. So there's a lot of options there too that you may want to explore that may give more capabilities of capturing that content. Look at the mobile view of the form too to make sure that if you have a lot of employees across your organization that are accessing it that it's in a good format and that it's not going to take too long for them to fill out. I know we've had various Microsoft Forms questions as we've been doing this series, and there are sometimes and people have even more complex needs. What Forms can do is pretty simplistic compared to some other third party tools as well. So just realize what the limitations are of what your needs are. I mean, if you're planning to do not just an employee, but like a customer survey, like your annual survey, and you want to build logic into that probably not a Microsoft Form solution. But I've used Qualtrics and there's a number of other tools and things that are out there that can do that complexity. So always use the right tool for the problem to solve that problem. There's a whole heap going on in Forms. Lots of changes happening at the moment. It's very different. When we started talking about it three, four years ago and some of these things, no, it's come a long way. One of my favorite sessions that I deliver at the conferences is Microsoft Forms. It doesn't take a monkey to use it. It's simple and therefore it's simple. You're not creating these ridiculous, you can create Power Automate, Power Apps too if you don't want to do a third-party tool, if you need to collect information. But it can be very simple. I'll add that I just noticed something today that changed since maybe the last time I did a file upload question, which was in Forms, if I'm the owner of it, it creates a folder in my OneDrive and that's where it's capturing all of the files that they're uploading with that form and that changed. The name of it I think used to be, I don't remember what it was called it, but now it's an Apps folder and within that, it's Microsoft Forms folder and then within that, it's the name of the form and then within that each question has a folder. There's some things you want to get familiar with too to understand that if you're the sole owner of it, it's going to your OneDrive versus if it's a group form. Where's that content going that you may need to collect? There might be some things like you're asking them to upload an image or a video or a Word document. Depending on the types of questions that you have, you should definitely consider, where is that being captured and is there other people that need to manage that with you in case you're out of the office? Or are you in the lot and run away? And now we're going to act to say, because they killed you OneDrive. Yeah. Because that happens.