Deleting a Request - direct back to Organization Summary
I'd like to request that after a request is deleted, that we not be directed back to the dashboard.
I have needed to delete several requests under an organization profile as the applicant has created more than one draft that they were not planning to use, and they wanted to clean up their history (which we encourage also). It is a little finicky to be directed back to the Dashboard if you are doing more than one deletion, or you planned to do some other clean up on the organization or make a note of the request to delete files in the Organization Comments section.
Just wanted to see if this is an easy fix and if others might find this useful.
Moved to Archive during a clean up effort in April 2024.
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Chris Dahl commented
Hi Karen,
Thanks for the feedback. I'm a bit curious - when you say "stay on the Organization record", I'm not sure I follow. You can get to the page to delete a grant from a lot of places, and unless I'm really missing something, you're not on the Organization view page when you delete the grant. You should be on Foundation/Administration/ApplicantProcessView.aspx ...
Do you mean that you came from the Organization View page (Foundation/Administration/OrganizationView.aspx) to get to the page to delete the grant, and you want to be directed back there? If so, we can take a look at what that would take. Can you supply a bit more information around the workflow you are taking?
Thanks,
-chris
posted January 29, 2013 by Chris Dahl, Foundant Technologies
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Ideas commented
I just deleted a grant that was created in error. It turned out to be a duplicate grant that was created on a duplicate organization record.
When I deleted the grant I was redirected to the dashboard. It would be a big time saver if I could just stay on the Organization record so I can keep working on that one record. Now I have to search for the org name, and because it is a duplicate it's just that more frustrating to figure out if I'm on the correct Org record or not.
Idea posted January 3, 2013 by Karen Wallace, First Fruit Incorporated