How do I find unused dashboards in Salesforce?

How do I find unused dashboards in Salesforce?

Salesforce.com – Find Old or Inactive Reports and Dashboards in Salesforce

  1. Click on the Reports Tab and then click the New Report.
  2. Choose the report type you just created by navigating the folder it was stored in from the drop-down list.
  3. Click the Create.
  4. Add the following criteria to the report:

How do I delete unused reports in Salesforce?

To Mass-Delete Reports

  1. Navigate to the Setup area of Salesforce.
  2. Under Administer, expand Data Management.
  3. Click Mass Delete Records.
  4. Choose Mass Delete Reports.
  5. In the filter criteria, choose “Report Name contains YYMM” (using the YYMM you need to delete).
  6. Click Search.

Can we schedule dynamic dashboards in Salesforce?

You can’t schedule refreshes for dynamic dashboards. They must be refreshed manually.

Is there a default report type in soql?

Ideally, this would not only be available through SOQL, but also as a column on the “Reports” report type, and as a default column in the reports view. It’s ridiculous to need to use the Metadata API or click through to the report (and then click customize!) just to see what report type was used.

Why are so many people not using dashboards?

People started disparaging dashboards as ‘wrong’, and blatantly ignoring them. Many saw them as a threat to their jobs and if they saw numbers they didn’t expect, chalked it up to ‘bad data’. We had a serious trust problem, and dashboards offered little opportunity to assuage their concerns.

How to identify databases that are no longer in use?

The third suggestion is to create a simple logon trigger that records an entry every time a user logins. Logon triggers fire stored procedures in response to a LOGON event. This event is raised when a user session is established with an instance of SQL Server.

What was the first company to use a dashboard?

The company had just purchased its first dashboarding tool and our team was responsible for the exciting transition from tired spreadsheets and SSRS reports to shiny, new dashboards. The jump from s preadsheet to dashboard was a significant leap forward in analytical maturity for us.