![]() ![]() ![]() The “Label ids Item – 1” is also optional, and it lets you automatically tag a card created this way with a color label. This may be useful if you’re using this flow to work collaboratively with a team on Trello. You don’t have to do this part, but you can if you’d like. Okay, under “Member Ids Item – 1”, just choose which user on Trello will inherit the card automatically once it comes over from Google. Choose the board you want your Google Tasks to go to, and move on to the “Parent List Id” box. In the second box, choose the dropdown box for “Board Id” and you’ll notice that all of the Trello boards associated with that login you used during the connection process will be populated. I chose the default list, which I’ve renamed “Field Notes” so that I can quickly add things to it on the go as I used to do with my Bullet Journal Field Notes notebook. In the first box, the drop-down for “Task List ID” will let you choose one of your Google Tasks lists. The second box says “Create a card”, and it features a Trello icon. You see, the first box says “When a task is added to a task list” and it has a Google Tasks logo (a really old one at that!). Here’s where it may get a little confusing, but I promise it’s not so bad. ![]() Okay, both connections are established, right? Click the blue “Continue” button just below that. Pro Tip: If the “Sign in” button for Trello is greyed out, just refresh the page! We saw this to be a consistent problem with Power Automate, but was easily fixed by tapping F5 on your keyboard or clicking the refresh button on your browser’s top bar. ![]()
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