Skip to main content
cancel
Showing results for 
Search instead for 
Did you mean: 

Enhance your career with this limited time 50% discount on Fabric and Power BI exams. Ends August 31st. Request your voucher.

Reply
JustinZZ
Frequent Visitor

Best way to combine.

So I have two data sources - one is an aging report, and one is an open job report. They each share common salespeople. I currently have a page setup with the aging data visualized on one side and the open orders on the other. 

How would I go about creating a single list of salespeople that when clicked affects both report types?

 

 

1 ACCEPTED SOLUTION
jthomson
Solution Sage
Solution Sage

You could join the two queries you have already on the salesperson columns, get rid of everything else in your new table then remove the duplicates, relate it to your existing tables and you should be good to go

View solution in original post

2 REPLIES 2
v-ljerr-msft
Microsoft Employee
Microsoft Employee

Hi @JustinZZ,

 

Have you tried the solution provided by @jthomson above? Does it work in your scenario? If it works, could you accept it as solution to close this thread?

 

If you still have any question on this issue, feel free to post here. Smiley Happy

 

Regards

jthomson
Solution Sage
Solution Sage

You could join the two queries you have already on the salesperson columns, get rid of everything else in your new table then remove the duplicates, relate it to your existing tables and you should be good to go

Helpful resources

Announcements
July 2025 community update carousel

Fabric Community Update - July 2025

Find out what's new and trending in the Fabric community.

July PBI25 Carousel

Power BI Monthly Update - July 2025

Check out the July 2025 Power BI update to learn about new features.