Parts of the Form
In general, most workflow business process forms consist of three major sections:
- Upper form
- Action (or Task) Details
Non-workflow business processes do not have an Action Details section.
- Line Item Details, unless otherwise noted.
You can minimize and later expand a business process form. For example, you might want to minimize the General and workflow portions of the form to avoid scrolling through many line items.
Toolbar: The workflow business process form has a toolbar at the top of the form. This allows you to access all parts of the business process form, such as the Upper form and Line Item Details, and has the following buttons in the top right corner:
- Send
- Save
- Menu Options: The options in this menu may vary per business process, but each workflow bp has the following menu options:
- Print
- HTML
- Custom
- Reload
- Review
- Help
- (Business process name) Help
- User Productivity Kit
- Close
- Print
After you are done working on the business process form, click Send to route the workflow business process to the specified recipients. You can click Save to save a draft of the form, so you can work on it again. When you have completed work on the business form, click Close.
Note: The Close action does not save the information on the form. To save the information, you must click Save before you close the form.
Additional Elements of the Form
Upper Form: The upper portion of the business process contains the basic (General) information that the form is managing, such as the name of the record and its description, who created the record and when, and other general information. It may also contain fields for referencing other forms, and it may contain fields that are required for specific functionality. This is an example of an upper form for a business process type called Work Orders:
Workflow or Action Details: This section appears in the middle part of workflow business processes. It is for viewing or assigning the next assignee in the workflow or shows the last person who took action on it. Depending on how the workflow has been set up for the BP, the next assignees may be predetermined, or you may be able to choose the next assignee or send a copy of the BP to another user. You can print workflow progress using custom print.
Non-workflow business processes do not have an Action Details section.
When you finish a form, clicking Send will show the Workflow Action Details window. The To: and Cc: buttons are active after you select a workflow action in the Workflow Actions drop-down list.
Note: If there is only one possible workflow action for a step, the action is auto-populated in the field.
You can track a step through the workflow by clicking on the link Workflow Progress tab in the right pane.
In Classic View, click the notepaper icon next to Task Notes in the Action Details section to add notes to the routed task. These are notes for the task recipients.
Content or Lower Form: The lower portion of the form contains the details and main content of the record, such as line items, file attachments for Document-type business processes such as transmittals or submittals, or comments or instructions in text-type BPs such as RFIs. Simple-type BPs do not have a Content section.
The lower form of certain BPs may be organized using multiple tabs. The BPs that support tabs in the lower form are:
- Line item type
- Cost type with the classification generic (line items with CBS codes, multiple codes, or account codes)
- Cost type with the classification lease, and the subtype line items with multiple codes
Tip: If the entire name is too long to appear on the tab, hover over the tab. Unifier will display the complete name in a tool tip.
The tool bar in the line items log contains the following options:
- Form View
- Grid View
- Add
- Actions
- Import
- Data From CSV File
- Data From Microsoft Excel File
- Import
- Refresh
- Print
- Export To CSV
- Export to Excel
- Search
- Find on Page
The gear menu for each line item contains the following options:
- Copy
- Remove
- Add to Group
About summary line item
Example
When a subcontractor wants to provide input related to the cost of a Change Order, the subcontractor can add summary line items to the change order without being able to see the cost breakdown structure that the contractor, or the owner, is using. The contractor, or the owner, can then review the summary line items and add them to the cost breakdown, for each of the summary lines added by the subcontractor.
Last Published Monday, August 28, 2023