As you may already know, Power BI is not a report-authoring tool only. Indeed, it is much more than that. Power BI is an all-around data platform supporting many aspects you’d expect from such a platform. You can ingest the data from various data sources, transform it, model it, visualise and share it with others. Read more about what Power BI is here.
One of the key aspects of users’ experience in Power BI is their ability to collaborate in creating and sharing artifacts, making it an easy-to-use and convenient platform. But the convenience comes with the cost of having a lot of shared artifacts in large organisations raising concerns about the artifact’s quality and trustworthiness. It would be hard, if not impossible, to identify the quality of the artifacts without a mechanism to identify the quality of the artifacts. Endorsement is the answer to this.
In this series of blog posts, I answer the following questions:
- What does content mean in Power BI? (this post)
- What is endorsement? (this post)
- Which artifacts support endorsement? (this post)
- Who can endorse the supported artifacts? (this post)
- How to endorse the supported artifacts?
- What are endorsement processes?
But before we start, we need to know what content means in Power BI.
What does Content Mean in Power BI?
Update:
Microsoft lately updated the “Content” terminology, which is slightly different from when I wrote this blog. So I replaced content with artifact that is a more generic term. While the term content is not relevant to the topic anymore, I decided to keep this section explaining what content means in Power BI.
When we use the term Content in the context of Power BI, we refer to the artifacts related to visuals in Power BI Service. We currently have the following artifacts in Power BI:
- Datasets
- Reports
- Dashboards
- Apps
- Paginated reports
- Dataflows
- Streaming datasets
- Streaming dataflow
- Datamarts
- Metrics
- Excel workbooks
From those artifacts, the Reports, Dashboards and Apps are Contents.
Continue reading “Endorsement in Power BI, Part 1, The Basics”