![]() On the screenshot below you may see fields provided by a standard response to. That way you don’t need to enter credentials second time as you has been authorized in that browser (when opened your group page). If you are eager to test this yourself, open your group page in a browser and get Group ID from the URL.īuild a query string using pattern above and navigate to it in the same browser, just in a different tab. Using paging is as important as breathing, because by default Yammer returns only limited number of records. Shortly, for getting users from Yammer group we can use following patternįor paging we need to add “page=N” as a query option export all messages in a conversation Querying Users of a Certain Group Google has indexed one of their documentsĥ. In other words, “all messages from a user with a certain ID”.Ĭrikey! Seems like Queensland government uses Yammer! But you can give it a try!Īlternatively, consider making GET requests using Power Query to get data from YammerĮxplanation of methods in that documentation is not very detailed and not everything is covered.įor example, I was looking for a way of exporting all my messages. However, O365 admins can limit list of allowed for MS Flow connectors.Īs you may guess, for me this option doesn’t work. One of the easiest options would be using Microsoft Flow and export necessary data to CSV / Excel / Dataflow Good news! If you are not a verified admin, you still can use GET requests to API.įirstly, we need to connect to Yammer API. There is also a link to mass Data Export from Yammer, but again – for verified admins only. Ooooookay, but I just need the info about messages in my group and my personal messages (how many likes do I have, eh?) Building Yammer analytics on Power BIĭocumentation is far not perfect, but it provides an idea on where to start. Perhaps, because I’m not a Verified Admin. You are here to know how to get data from Yammer to Power BI in the end.īefore pulling data to Power BI and reinventing the wheel, you might want to consider existing options like Tryane analytics or something similar.įor example, by default we have Yammer’s Group Insights, which it not a bad thing I should say, but too high-level.īelow is the last 12 months report for my group with 556 members at the time of writing.ĭefault ‘Group Insights’ feature gives a very high-level overview as you may see.Īnother option would be a solution from tyGraph for Yammer! Yes… but I couldn’t get it working. But this is not something I want to talk about today. As of today, many are still considering it as evil, “waste of time” etc. ![]() ![]() People were reluctant to use Yammer in the beginning. That screenshot was made in Nov-15, pretty much one year since Yammer was widely introduced in the organization. It is not a secret that adoption of internal social media in any organization takes time. Does anyone read my posts?īack in the days we used for that. Why not in public place? Because of company-related technologies/data on screenshots and videos.Īfter a certain time I was obviously keen to know stats about my group. With the good thoughts in my mind I started utilizing Yammer to spread the knowledge, share tips and tricks on various topics: Excel, VBA, Power BI, O365 services, SharePoint, MS Flow etc. ![]() There are usually tons of company-specific questions around data & reporting: where to get data from, how to clean / transform, how to interpret etc. IMHO, any large organization needs something like this. I have access to Yammer in one of such organizations since 2014 and in November 2014 I founded a group dedicated to “Data Analysis & Reporting” related questions. It is a large international organization with employees around the globe (think big). Let’s imagine your organization is using Yammer as an internal platform for digital collaboration, engagement, knowledge sharing etc. Have you heard about Yammer? It is a social network for organizations, kind of a “private Facebook”.
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