Forum Discussion
Microsoft Lists - how to move?
An option is to use Power Automate to migrate your data across. This is a basic run down of what you need to do.
Note: For some fields (e.g. multi choice drop downs etc, images etc) you'll need to add some extra functionality in but this should get you started.
Step 1: Create your new list, based on your original list
This will replicate the columns for you.
In Microsoft Lists
- Select New list
- Select From existing list
- Select My lists in the "Select a team or site" column
- Select the list you want to copy
- Select Next
- Enter the name, description, color and icon of the new list. (If you want to use the same name, it will initially have an error saying "List already exist")
- In the 'Save to' dropdown, select the location for your new list (once changed, the error will disappear)
Step 2: Set up your flow in Power Automate
- Select Create
- Select Manually trigger a flow
- Add the action Get Items (SharePoint)
- For Site Address, select Enter custom value
- You will need to copy/paste your personal list location. You can get this by opening your original list. From the url, copy everything in https://[your-domain].sharepoint.com/personal/[username_domain]
- For List Name, select original list
- For Site Address, select Enter custom value
- Add the action Create Item (SharePoint) - this will also create an Apply to each action for you
- For Site Address, select the site of the new list
- For List name, select the new list
- For each of the fields, select the matching field in the list that pops up under Get Items
- Save and test!
If the solution involves "go to Power Automate and set up this or that" or "in Power Apps do the other thing" or even Sharepoint much of anything - you've rendered the solution unavailable to small businesses that don't have IT staff and don't WANT IT staff, they just want app that work, simply, reliably.
- LesliePSep 14, 2023Copper ContributorThe problem is that "excel as a database" isn't working. It's awful. People need and want something like Airtable, Seatable, Baserow, Grist, etc - the familiar spreadsheet interface with the fields and connectivity of a relational database, able to be set up, modified, and understood by a normal person. I had hoped that Lists was Microsoft's attempt to catch up and participate in that arena. It seems not.
- HelloBenTeohSep 14, 2023Bronze Contributor
LeslieP I hear you. Excel's flexibility has made it this one-stop-shop for a lot of this type of work. If it's working for you, then keep it going. The M365 suite has so many different apps, but they all have limitations or dependencies. The MOCA really highlights how 'noisy' the app collection we have is - I think it's just a case where you pick what's going to fit the way you work.
Where I see Lists working really well is when you're pairing it up with Power Automate and other services. But like you mentioned, that's a different skill set that's not available to everyone.