{"id":40093,"date":"2022-12-06T07:13:09","date_gmt":"2022-12-06T12:13:09","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/centricconsulting.com\/?p=40093"},"modified":"2023-09-19T21:22:28","modified_gmt":"2023-09-20T01:22:28","slug":"power-platform-center-of-excellence-starter-kit","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/centricconsulting.com\/blog\/power-platform-center-of-excellence-starter-kit\/","title":{"rendered":"Power Platform Center of Excellence Starter Kit"},"content":{"rendered":"

In this blog, we walk through three components of Microsoft’s Power Platform Center of Excellence Starter Kit to help you get started developing a governance and adoption strategy.<\/h2>\n
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The Microsoft Power Platform Center of Excellence (CoE) Starter Kit contains various apps, dashboards and features to help organizations maximize their insight and productivity.<\/p>\n

Here we will provide an in-depth examination of three major features: the Power Platform<\/a> Admin View app, the Command Center and Core apps.<\/p>\n

Power Platform Admin View<\/h2>\n

As one of the core components, Microsoft<\/a> designed the Power Platform Admin View app to be a centralized location for administrators to view inside the Power Platform. It allows them to quickly view different assets deployed across all environments and provide the who, what, where and when information.<\/strong><\/p>\n

The admin view starts out with an Overview Dashboard, which provides quick insights about your makers, your environments and assets. Here, you can drill down for more insights about what is occurring in your tenant.<\/p>\n

\"Power<\/a><\/p>\n

Monitor<\/h3>\n

Each area of the Monitor section functions in a similar manner, but it’s important to know the areas the CoE will cover: PowerApps Apps, Flows, Environments, Connectors, Chatbots<\/a>, Desktop Flows, Power Pages Sites, Audit Logs, Business Process Flows and Solutions.<\/p>\n

You’ll notice one major leg is missing from all of this \u2013 Power BI<\/a>. This is because Power BI’s workspace architecture is wholly different from the Power Platform’s environment architecture. Hopefully, Microsoft will one day consolidate this \u2014 either on the back end or at least through the CoE \u2014 to give us a total view of the Power Platform.<\/strong><\/p>\n

To start, I’m going to use the PowerApps apps view. This will provide us with an example of the structure of each view and what we can do with each of them.<\/p>\n

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\"Power<\/a><\/p>\n

With this view, we can see all the PowerApps Apps in our tenant across all environments. By clicking on “All Apps,” we can change the current view to some of the various pre-built views Microsoft provides (i.e., canvas apps, SharePoint forms or orphaned apps). This view helps admins quickly find problematic assets to remediate. Because this is a model app, we also get some handy built-in tools to work with this data, such as exporting it out to Excel, building charts on the fly and even spinning up custom flows to help automate custom tasks admins may want to have in place.<\/p>\n

If we click on the name of an app, we see specific details, including:<\/strong><\/p>\n