Starting a SharePoint Designer 2010 workflow within a SharePoint Designer 2013 workflow

1–2 minutes

startaworkflow

Sometimes you’ll into situations where a SharePoint Designer (SPD) 2010 workflow is the only way to go in order to make something work. In May 2017, I gave a presentation at SharePoint Saturday Baltimore and shared the following slide of functions only possible by using a SharePoint Designer 2010 format workflow.

SPSBaltimore2017-Workflows.jpg

Unfortunately, you may have loads of conditions and stages already built in a SPD 2013 workflow by the time you realize you need some of this 2010-exclusive functionality. No need to fret, however, because we can start that necessary 2010 workflow from wherever we need to within our 2013 workflow, as if it were just another ordinary step.

  1. Create a new list workflow from within SharePoint Designer
    newworkflowonlist2
  2. Give it a name, a description and choose 2010 as the platform type
    2010workflow
  3. Because your scenarios will vary widely, take this step #3 to write whatever you need to that will only work in a 2010 workflow (impersonation steps, converting lookup columns to text, etc.)
  4. Go to your workflow settings now, and set it to only start manually (under “start options”)startoptions2
  5. Now go to your 2013 workflow for which you’d like to pull in that new 2010 workflow. Create a new stage, if you wish, or click where you’d like to insert it, type “Start” and enter, and select “Start a List Workflow” from the options.startaworkflow
  6. Before you click anything else, refresh (refresh2) SharePoint Designer to make sure your brand new workflow will show as an option for you. Do not overlook this step.
    refresh
  7. Now click on “SharePoint 2010 list workflow”, select the list name for which it was made, then select your workflow from the second dropdown (assuming you followed step 6)
    startaworkflow2
  8. Click OK.
  9. Click “parameters” and then OK (I’m assuming you didn’t set any up in your 2010 workflow, but feel free to set them here if you need to)
  10. Click “this item” then OK.

That’s it! Publish your changes. Your 2010 workflow will now run as part of your 2013 workflow as if it were just another step.

 


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5 responses to “Starting a SharePoint Designer 2010 workflow within a SharePoint Designer 2013 workflow”

  1. […] I frequently reference two resources linked at the bottom of this post that speak to the features unique to 2010 and 2013 workflows. Unfortunately, once you pick which workflow platform you’ll be building upon you can’t switch. So it’s important to use these lists in your evaluation phase to make sure you’ll be picking the right platform for the job. Keep in mind, you can always start a 2010 workflow from within a 2013 workflow. […]

  2. […] I frequently reference two resources linked at the bottom of this post that speak to the features unique to 2010 and 2013 workflows. Unfortunately, once you pick which workflow platform you’ll be building upon you can’t switch. So it’s important to use these lists in your evaluation phase to make sure you’ll be picking the right platform for the job. Keep in mind, you can always start a 2010 workflow from within a 2013 workflow. […]

  3. […] But to be certain you get around this 2013 obstacle, simply use a 2010 workflow. SharePoint Designer workflows built on the 2010 platform do not verify addresses. And if you’ve already built a complicated masterpiece in 2013, no need to fret. You can always create a 2010 workflow just for the email and start it within your 2013 workflow. […]

  4. […] the Blogosphere Starting a SharePoint Designer 2010 workflow within a SharePoint Designer 2013 workflow (SharePoint Librarian) Sometimes you’ll into situations where a SharePoint Designer (SPD) 2010 […]

  5. […] Microsoft Flow. You must use a SharePoint Designer 2010 workflow for this to work. And remember, you can start a 2010 workflow from within a 2013 workflow, so it shouldn’t interfere too much with your larger […]

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