Automation Workflows

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Design and implement automation workflows to save time and scale operations as a solopreneur. Use when identifying repetitive tasks to automate, building wor...

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Purpose & Capability
Name and description match the SKILL.md content: guidance for identifying automation opportunities, choosing tools (Zapier/Make/n8n), and building workflows. There are no unrelated requested binaries, env vars, or installs.
Instruction Scope
Runtime instructions stay within the stated purpose (audit, design, build, test, and maintain automations). They reference connecting third-party accounts via OAuth and mapping fields in automation tools — expected for this topic. The instructions do not ask the agent to read local files, environment variables, or send data to unexpected endpoints.
Install Mechanism
No install spec and no code files — lowest-risk instruction-only skill. Nothing is downloaded or written to disk by the skill itself.
Credentials
The skill declares no required env vars or credentials, which is appropriate for a playbook. Note: following the guidance will require you to connect third‑party services (OAuth/API keys) in the automation platforms; that external credential use is expected but is a user action outside the skill. Exercise least-privilege when authorizing connectors.
Persistence & Privilege
always is false and the skill does not request any persistent agent privileges or attempt to modify other skills/config. Normal autonomous invocation remains allowed by platform defaults.
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[none] expected: No regex-based scan findings were produced — the skill is instruction-only so the static scanner had no code to analyze.
[meta.mismatch] unexpected: Minor metadata inconsistency: registry metadata lists ownerId 'kn7avzkwgyswtkceb1gkcvzttx845df5' and version 1.0.0, while _meta.json contains ownerId 'kn732qfbv22he1jqm63xbwq6e980kn8s' and version 0.1.0. This appears to be a bookkeeping mismatch (not harmful in itself) but worth verifying the source/origin before trusting.
Assessment
This is a coherent, low-risk instructional playbook. Before using it: (1) verify the author/source because metadata shows a small mismatch; (2) when you implement automations, grant connectors the minimum OAuth scopes necessary and prefer test/dummy accounts for initial runs; (3) review data flows in each automation (what third parties will receive your customer data); (4) if automating sensitive data, consider self‑hosting n8n or using tools with strong data governance; (5) test error handling and revoke tokens you no longer need. These steps reduce the usual risks when wiring multiple external services together.

Like a lobster shell, security has layers — review code before you run it.

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License

MIT-0
Free to use, modify, and redistribute. No attribution required.

SKILL.md

Automation Workflows

Overview

As a solopreneur, your time is your most valuable asset. Automation lets you scale without hiring. The goal is simple: automate anything you do more than twice a week that doesn't require creative thinking. This playbook shows you how to identify automation opportunities, design workflows, and implement them without writing code.


Step 1: Identify What to Automate

Not every task should be automated. Start by finding the highest-value opportunities.

Automation audit (spend 1 hour on this):

  1. Track every task you do for a week (use a notebook or simple spreadsheet)

  2. For each task, note:

    • How long it takes
    • How often you do it (daily, weekly, monthly)
    • Whether it's repetitive or requires judgment
  3. Calculate time cost per task:

    Time Cost = (Minutes per task × Frequency per month) / 60
    

    Example: 15 min task done 20x/month = 5 hours/month

  4. Sort by time cost (highest to lowest)

Good candidates for automation:

  • Repetitive (same steps every time)
  • Rule-based (no complex judgment calls)
  • High-frequency (daily or weekly)
  • Time-consuming (takes 10+ minutes)

Examples:

  • ✅ Sending weekly reports to clients (same format, same schedule)
  • ✅ Creating invoices after payment
  • ✅ Adding new leads to CRM from form submissions
  • ✅ Posting social media content on a schedule
  • ❌ Conducting customer discovery interviews (requires nuance)
  • ❌ Writing custom proposals for clients (requires creativity)

Low-hanging fruit checklist (start here):

  • Email notifications for form submissions
  • Auto-save form responses to spreadsheet
  • Schedule social posts in advance
  • Auto-create invoices from payment confirmations
  • Sync data between tools (CRM ↔ email tool ↔ spreadsheet)

Step 2: Choose Your Automation Tool

Three main options for no-code automation. Pick based on complexity and budget.

Tool comparison:

ToolBest ForPricingLearning CurvePower Level
ZapierSimple, 2-3 step workflows$20-50/monthEasyLow-Medium
Make (Integromat)Visual, multi-step workflows$9-30/monthMediumMedium-High
n8nComplex, developer-friendly, self-hostedFree (self-hosted) or $20/monthMedium-HardHigh

Selection guide:

  • Budget < $20/month → Try Zapier free tier or n8n self-hosted
  • Need visual workflow builder → Make
  • Simple 2-step workflows → Zapier
  • Complex workflows with branching logic → Make or n8n
  • Want full control and customization → n8n

Recommendation for solopreneurs: Start with Zapier (easiest to learn). Graduate to Make or n8n when you hit Zapier's limits.


Step 3: Design Your Workflow

Before building, map out the workflow on paper or a whiteboard.

Workflow design template:

TRIGGER: What event starts the workflow?
  Example: "New row added to Google Sheet"

CONDITIONS (optional): Should this workflow run every time, or only when certain conditions are met?
  Example: "Only if Status column = 'Approved'"

ACTIONS: What should happen as a result?
  Step 1: [action]
  Step 2: [action]
  Step 3: [action]

ERROR HANDLING: What happens if something fails?
  Example: "Send me a Slack message if action fails"

Example workflow (lead capture → CRM → email):

TRIGGER: New form submission on website

CONDITIONS: Email field is not empty

ACTIONS:
  Step 1: Add lead to CRM (e.g., Airtable or HubSpot)
  Step 2: Send welcome email via email tool (e.g., ConvertKit)
  Step 3: Create task in project management tool (e.g., Notion) to follow up in 3 days
  Step 4: Send me a Slack notification: "New lead: [Name]"

ERROR HANDLING: If Step 1 fails, send email alert to me

Design principles:

  • Keep it simple — start with 2-3 steps, add complexity later
  • Test each step individually before chaining them together
  • Add delays between actions if needed (some APIs are slow)
  • Always include error notifications so you know when things break

Step 4: Build and Test Your Workflow

Now implement it in your chosen tool.

Build workflow (Zapier example):

  1. Choose trigger app (e.g., Google Forms, Typeform, website form)
  2. Connect your account (authenticate via OAuth)
  3. Test trigger (submit a test form to make sure data comes through)
  4. Add action (e.g., "Add row to Google Sheets")
  5. Map fields (match form fields to spreadsheet columns)
  6. Test action (run test to verify row is added correctly)
  7. Repeat for additional actions
  8. Turn on workflow (Zapier calls this "turn on Zap")

Testing checklist:

  • Submit test data through the trigger
  • Verify each action executes correctly
  • Check that data maps to the right fields
  • Test with edge cases (empty fields, special characters, long text)
  • Test error handling (intentionally cause a failure to see if alerts work)

Common issues and fixes:

IssueCauseFix
Workflow doesn't triggerTrigger conditions too narrowCheck filter settings, broaden criteria
Action failsAPI rate limit or permissionsAdd delay between actions, re-authenticate
Data missing or incorrectField mapping wrongDouble-check which fields are mapped
Workflow runs multiple timesDuplicate triggersDe-duplicate based on unique ID

Rule: Test with real data before relying on an automation. Don't discover bugs when a real customer is involved.


Step 5: Monitor and Maintain Automations

Automations aren't set-it-and-forget-it. They break. Tools change. APIs update. You need a maintenance plan.

Weekly check (5 min):

  • Scan workflow logs for errors (most tools show a log of runs + failures)
  • Address any failures immediately

Monthly audit (15 min):

  • Review all active workflows
  • Check: Is this still being used? Is it still saving time?
  • Disable or delete unused workflows (they clutter your dashboard and can cause confusion)
  • Update any workflows that depend on tools you've switched away from

Where to store workflow documentation:

  • Create a simple doc (Notion, Google Doc) for each workflow
  • Include: What it does, when it runs, what apps it connects, how to troubleshoot
  • If you have 10+ workflows, this doc will save you hours when something breaks

Error handling setup:

  • Route all error notifications to one place (Slack channel, email inbox, or task manager)
  • Set up: "If any workflow fails, send a message to [your error channel]"
  • Review errors weekly and fix root causes

Step 6: Advanced Automation Ideas

Once you've automated the basics, consider these higher-leverage workflows:

Client onboarding automation

TRIGGER: New client signs contract (via DocuSign, HelloSign)
ACTIONS:
  1. Create project in project management tool
  2. Add client to CRM with "Active" status
  3. Send onboarding email sequence
  4. Create invoice in accounting software
  5. Schedule kickoff call on calendar
  6. Add client to Slack workspace (if applicable)

Content distribution automation

TRIGGER: New blog post published on website (via RSS or webhook)
ACTIONS:
  1. Post link to LinkedIn with auto-generated caption
  2. Post link to Twitter as a thread
  3. Add post to email newsletter draft (in email tool)
  4. Add to content calendar (Notion or Airtable)
  5. Send notification to team (Slack) that post is live

Customer health monitoring

TRIGGER: Every Monday at 9am (scheduled trigger)
ACTIONS:
  1. Pull usage data for all customers from database (via API)
  2. Flag customers with <50% of average usage
  3. Add flagged customers to "At Risk" segment in CRM
  4. Send re-engagement email campaign to at-risk customers
  5. Create task for me to personally reach out to top 10 at-risk customers

Invoice and payment tracking

TRIGGER: Payment received (Stripe webhook)
ACTIONS:
  1. Mark invoice as paid in accounting software
  2. Send receipt email to customer
  3. Update CRM: customer status = "Paid"
  4. Add revenue to monthly dashboard (Google Sheets or Airtable)
  5. Send me a Slack notification: "Payment received: $X from [Customer]"

Step 7: Calculate Automation ROI

Not every automation is worth the time investment. Calculate ROI to prioritize.

ROI formula:

Time Saved per Month (hours) = (Minutes per task / 60) × Frequency per month
Cost = (Setup time in hours × $50/hour) + Tool cost per month
Payback Period (months) = Setup cost / Monthly time saved value

If payback period < 3 months → Worth it
If payback period > 6 months → Probably not worth it (unless it unlocks other value)

Example:

Task: Manually copying form submissions to CRM (15 min, 20x/month = 5 hours/month saved)
Setup time: 1 hour
Tool cost: $20/month (Zapier)
Payback: ($50 setup cost) / ($250/month value saved) = 0.2 months → Absolutely worth it

Rule: Focus on automations with payback < 3 months. Those are your highest-leverage investments.


Automation Mistakes to Avoid

  • Automating before optimizing. Don't automate a bad process. Fix the process first, then automate it.
  • Over-automating. Not everything needs to be automated. If a task is rare or requires judgment, do it manually.
  • No error handling. If an automation breaks and you don't know, it causes silent failures. Always set up error alerts.
  • Not testing thoroughly. A broken automation is worse than no automation — it creates incorrect data or missed tasks.
  • Building too complex too fast. Start with simple 2-3 step workflows. Add complexity only when the simple version works perfectly.
  • Not documenting workflows. Future you will forget how this works. Write it down.

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