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Scheduled Refresh failure notification should go to service/admin account

When scheduling a dataset refresh there should be an option to send the failure to someone other than the person that created the scheduled refresh, eg the support email box.
Status: Needs Votes
Comments
NerdFlanders
Advocate I
This is a key feuture thats really important for our business. If someone shares a report from a group to other people and the owner is sick or on vacation, nobody would recognize a failed data refresh. To setup a custom mail or distribution list is very important!
sivapratapkurap
New Member
This requirement is very critical in terms of operations perspective. The reason being the dataset developer or owner might leave the organization at any team and this creates a havoc once his account gets terminated in AD. Also, super users or members marked as admins of the dataset should have ability to subscribe for the 'alerts's.
kevin_carr
New Member
Operationally, this is a 'must have'. Support organizations are rarely one person and the author is often commissioned to create the report.
scott_casavant
New Member
This is a much needed enhancement. Makes no sense that PowerBI cannot do this.
demo1
New Member
Any updates in this issue? This is very needed. Thank you
damien_dent2
New Member
Come on Microsoft this request was presented 18 months ago.. Its not difficult and would be greatly appreciated to all those that Build and Support BI only 10% of the week.
Eric15
New Member
Definitely need this.....
sarahsun
Regular Visitor
voted. really need this feature.
heather3
New Member
Yes this needs to happen asap! My clients had issues while I was away as no one else knew the refreshes were failing.
Annietwo
Frequent Visitor
We need this as an admin feature... tracking of all datasets and all failures - whether they are live or imported, on demand vs scheduled, etc. This is how PowerPivot in SharePoint works. Why can't they do it with PBI?? We don't have a SQL backend to connect to, but we do have gateway logs and O365 logs... neither seem to provide good information on failures. And even if they did it would be difficult to create 'alerts's off that data.