Adaptive Cards and Task Previews
4.4 Adaptive Cards and Task Previews
ACTIONBRIDGE uses Microsoft Teams Adaptive Cards to display rich previews of tasks and comments directly in your Teams channels. This keeps important updates visible without leaving the conversation.
When Are Adaptive Cards Used?
- First Comment on a task can be sent to the linked Teams channel thread as an adaptive card.
- Important updates such as task creation (planned), assignments, or status changes may also use adaptive cards (based on future configuration).
- Users can view task details, assignees, and key metadata directly in Teams.
Card Contents
- Task Title with link to open the task in ACTIONBRIDGE
- Status, Priority, and Due Date shown clearly
- Comment Content from the user who posted it
- Mentioned Users listed for visibility
- “Open Task” Button for direct access
Channel Behavior
- Cards are posted in the channel where the ACTIONBRIDGE tab is linked.
- Replies in the channel thread do not sync back to ACTIONBRIDGE, but help with team visibility.
- Each task gets its own thread (if started with a comment); this helps keep discussions organized.
Tips
- Use the first comment to introduce the task clearly — it's what shows in Teams.
- Encourage teammates to reply in the thread to keep conversation grouped.
- Adaptive Cards are lightweight and optimized for mobile and desktop Teams views.
With Adaptive Cards, ACTIONBRIDGE keeps your team in sync — visually and contextually — right inside the Microsoft Teams environment.

Sho Shimoda
Spending more time creating help content than writing code — but only because making things easier is part of the product. Sho bridges engineering with user success, ensuring that every feature is not only powerful but also understandable. With a background in software development, AI integration, and product design, he now focuses on crafting systems where users don’t need to ask for help — but find it when they do.Category
Tags
Search History
Authors

Sho Shimoda
Spending more time creating help content than writing code — but only because making things easier is part of the product. Sho bridges engineering with user success, ensuring that every feature is not only powerful but also understandable. With a background in software development, AI integration, and product design, he now focuses on crafting systems where users don’t need to ask for help — but find it when they do.

Koki Nin
Managing code, chasing after enhancements — and sometimes chasing bugs that turned out to be features. Koki is at the heart of the product’s technical evolution, turning feedback into fixes, and specs into shippable reality. He thrives where architecture meets iteration, always pushing for cleaner code and smoother experiences.

Yasushi Motoki
Helping users start strong with ACTIONBRIDGE. Yasushi leads the onboarding experience, translating product complexity into clarity. Whether guiding first-time users or supporting enterprise rollouts, he ensures every team gets value from day one — and knows exactly where to go next.