When you need to orchestrate business processes across services with little technical user knowledge, which utility would you use?
When you need to orchestrate business processes across services with little technical user knowledge, which utility would you use?
When orchestrating business processes across services with minimal technical knowledge required, the most suitable utility is Flow Designer. Flow Designer provides a user-friendly, low-code interface that allows users to automate processes and create workflows in natural language, making it accessible to those with limited technical expertise. This utility is designed to help streamline the process of defining, managing, and automating workflows without needing deep programming skills.
Sorry for asking, but wondering why the rate of wrong answers are so high? It's pretty confusing showing totally wrong answers.
I believe this is due to the updates between versions, but I would also like a better explanation
Flow designer
The correct answer is: B. Flow Designer
Its B. Flow Designer
Flow Designer
Definitely B - Page 236 of the ServiceNow Administration Fundamentals - Tokyo Edition. The question is spelt out verbatim.
Flow Designer.
B is correct
B. Flow Designer is typically the most suitable utility. Flow Designer is designed to allow users to automate processes and create workflows through a user-friendly, low-code interface.
Flow Designer
Maybe in Rome the answer is "Flow Editor", but in Tokyo, it is "Flow Designer".
Flow Designer describes a workflow in natural language to help non-technical users understand what it does.
Flow Designer
Flow Designer B
Answer is B
Orchestration can make calls outside of a ServiceNow instance, directly to web services or through a MID Server to systems within corporate firewall. Orchestration also enables the creation reusable activities that wrapper Java Script functions for manipulating things inside the platform. Orchestration extends the Workflow editor by providing these features:
Flow designer is the right answer