Get Started with ThingWorx Digital Performance Management

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Overview: Get Started with ThingWorx Digital Performance Management

Plan User Access and Permissions

Review your list of potential users. Then determine which types of users should have permission to access which information within ThingWorx.

01. Out-of-the-Box User Groups

ThingWorx offers built-in user groups for administrators, developers, and users you could use to start. Work with PTC or a partner to establish the necessary user groups and permissions for the roles you want to use in DPM.

Different user roles determine the permissions you need to give to a user group. A user role is a person or group who can take specific actions in the app using specific data. An example might be a support engineer (user role) who pulls reports (permission) for a site in Europe (visibility). Anticipate that your user groups and organization units may expand over time.

There are two forms of permissions you can adjust:

  1. Run-time permissions dictate what services a user can execute and properties they can access. Run-time permissions are assigned at the user group level.
  2. Design-time permissions dictate what a user can modify or access in Composer. Design-time permissions are assigned at the user group level.

Adapt as needed. It would be best if you made changes to your user groups and permissions over time.

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02. Identify Who Will Be Users

To maximize the usefulness of your application, explore what your end users (employees working in the plant) need from it. Ask the following questions:

  • Who uses the application?
  • What are their goals? What tasks must they accomplish?
  • What are their pain points and challenges in their daily jobs?
  • Who do they work with to accomplish essential tasks?
  • How does their physical environment affect how they do their jobs?
  • What hardware will they be using for the app (desktop, mobile, or tablet)?

03. Map Users to User Groups

Now that you know how users interact with the application, outline your user groups. User groups restrict what workers can see and do in the application.

Review your list of potential users. Then determine which types of users should have permission to access which information within ThingWorx.

Keep in mind:

  • Balance permissions carefully. If you grant users too many permissions, they could see confidential data or mistakenly delete pieces of the application. On the other hand, granting users too few permissions may not access a vital screen.
  • In ThingWorx Composer, you create groupings at three levels:
    1. Organization
    2. Organizational unit
    3. User group
     

ThingWorx offers user groups for administrators, developers, and users: Depending on your needs, these user groups may be sufficient to start with. Later in the process you will set up the appropriate groups and invite users to ThingWorx.

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Plan Infrastructure

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Design Integrations and Connectivity

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