『Azure Logic Apps for Automation』のカバーアート

Azure Logic Apps for Automation

Azure Logic Apps for Automation

無料で聴く

ポッドキャストの詳細を見る

このコンテンツについて

Every week, I hear the same frustration: 'I spend more time fixing broken processes than actually getting work done.' Sound familiar? The truth is, your organization already has the tools to cut repetitive tasks in half—you just might not be using them. Azure Logic Apps isn’t just another Microsoft buzzword. It’s the glue holding modern workflows together across M365, the Power Platform, and countless other services. Today, I’ll prove how a single Logic App can save hours each week by automating the busywork. But first, let’s look at why you’re drowning in manual steps in the first place.Why Manual Tasks Are Holding Businesses BackPicture this: you’re sitting at your desk with Teams pinging every few minutes, Outlook filling with unread emails, and a SharePoint alert that someone just uploaded a report. At the same time, your manager is waiting for you to approve a purchase request. To keep things moving, you hop between apps, forward documents, send reminders, and chase down who is supposed to respond next. By lunchtime, you’ve done plenty of switching and checking, but almost no real work. That constant juggling has become the normal rhythm for many knowledge workers, and it’s draining. Hybrid work was pitched as the future that would streamline processes and cut down wasted time. But what actually happened in many organizations is the exact opposite. With staff spread across locations and devices, the number of apps and channels we use has ballooned. Instead of eliminating steps, hybrid setups often create more handoffs, more duplications, and more chances for something to fall through the cracks. It feels like we built bigger toolsets only to make everyone’s job more complicated. What makes this situation even stranger is the investment. Companies have rolled out Microsoft 365, adopted Teams meetings by default, and taught employees how to co-author in Word or Excel. On the surface, that looks efficient. Yet under the covers, the processes are still stitched together manually. Someone has to remember to route that document for review. Someone else must check the shared folder to see if the right draft is in place. Alerts have to be pasted into chats. Approvals linger in inboxes. All of this effort ends up working against the very tools we paid to improve productivity. Think about something simple like tracking who uploaded a financial report last week. In theory, you should open OneDrive or SharePoint, use version history, and see the details. In practice, most people scroll through long lists of files and recent edits, then send manual emails asking, “Did you upload version three?” They then copy the link into a team chat to keep everyone informed. By the time the group actually opens the right file, half an hour may have passed. Multiply that across dozens of small steps happening every day, and nobody is surprised when deadlines slip. Research into workplace efficiency shows just how much these tasks add up. Knowledge workers typically spend between thirty and forty percent of their week handling repetitive, low-value steps like forwarding emails, consolidating updates, or entering the same numbers into different systems. These aren’t difficult skills, they’re simply eating away at the hours employees could use for analysis, strategy, or creative work. Paying highly trained staff to copy links and chase approvals is like hiring a chef and asking them to wash dishes full-time. The best analogy I’ve heard is to think of these workflows like a plumbing system. Every time you add a manual step, you create a tiny leak. One leak may not flood the kitchen right away, but over time, the drips add up to gallons of wasted water. In business, that water is wasted time and focus. The leaks make the system unreliable, and instead of flowing smoothly, tasks get bogged down by friction. When managers talk about “moving faster” or “responding to the market,” they’re trying to reach speed while still dragging a network of leaky pipes. That mismatch is where frustration builds. We’re in a world where quick responses are expected by default. A customer emails, and they assume an answer within the hour. Executives want to approve spending in real time. Colleagues expect instant notifications when new documents appear. But when the process for each of those outcomes relies on manual routing, the expectations and the actual system are out of sync. The gap between speed and execution widens with every new workload. Here’s the twist. Microsoft didn’t ignore this problem. In fact, the solution already exists, built right into the Azure ecosystem. Many professionals log into Azure frequently without realizing it’s sitting there, ready to connect their day-to-day tools and automate repetitive tasks. They’re paying for the licensing and building workloads in Azure but still missing a piece of the puzzle. That piece is Azure Logic Apps. When set up correctly, Logic Apps can ...
まだレビューはありません