Best practices
Start narrow
Do not try to automate everything at once. Start with one repeated motion that matters.
Build for real behavior
Pick a workflow your team will actually use, not just admire.
Be specific
Clear triggers, clear context, clear outputs, clear guardrails.
Use public building blocks first
If you are building a customer-facing workflow, stick to the visible public catalog:
- public creation paths
- public triggers
- public action picker options
- public output types
Deliver results where people already are
Slack, email, and inbox artifacts often work better than expecting people to go looking for results elsewhere.
Review outputs before scaling
A workflow can save huge amounts of time, but trust comes from testing.
Do not overcomplicate version one
A simple workflow with a clear trigger and output is often more valuable than a complex one with too much logic.
The first win matters more than the perfect system.