The 3-Step Process for Your First Automation
S2 #504

The 3-Step Process for Your First Automation

So how do you

get started? How do you overcome

the blank canvas problem?

You've heard me talk about the four components of automation. Those are triggers,

actions, conditions, and timing.

But

you don't necessarily know what a trigger is, a good trigger or what an

action is.

You aren't sure what apps Zapier supports.

So

you're left wondering,

what can I do?

There's too much to understand. And so the first thing

that you need to do

is

understand your work.

This is why my documentation exercise is so important,

because if you don't know what to do or

if you don't know what you do,

then you just

stare at a blank canvas.

It's like if you've been tasked to write a paper

and you're not given a topic or any other parameters, just like, what am I gonna

write? A, there's so many things I can write about, or maybe a better example is

this.

Tell me a funny story.

Tell me a story from college.

Tell me something funny that happened to you when you were younger.

Most people will freeze when they get that question 'cause

they don't have something holstered.

They don't have something ready to be like, oh, here's a hilarious story.

So they freeze and they can't think of anything.

This has happened to me countless times. My, my oldest daughter has been asking my

wife and me, Hey, tell

me a funny story about mom from when you guys were dating. Or, Hey,

tell

me a funny story about Dad from when you first met him.

There's so many funny stories. I was an idiot when I was younger. I still kind of

am. So it's just, it's not that we don't have anything, just like, it's not that

you don't have anything to automate, it's that there are so many options you don't

know what to do. So

my recommendation first is

document.

Pick a process or a task or a workflow that you do. It could be writing your newsletter,

recording a podcast episode, making a YouTube video, following up with people who

fill out your intake form,

building your next product or service,

write everything you have to do down,

and then you have

a list of potential tasks,

a list of potential things that you can maybe hand off to Zapier,

right? The obvious example is booking guests, right? Which you actually don't need

to hand off to Zapier, right? You can just use cal.com or Calendly for that.

But an another example might be, well, okay, for my newsletter or for my podcasts,

I need to

capture ideas.

And sometimes I like to bookmark stories or links for episodes. What if when you

bookmarked a story, it got sent to your planning document or created a planning document

for you?

That's a trigger and an action that can, that is something you can do in Zapier,

but it goes beyond that. After you make the list of things that you need to do,

write down the apps you use to accomplish those tasks,

because that is the crucial part.

Knowing what apps you use is the key to understanding how you can use Zapier.

And we'll get into exactly how you can use Zapier

right after this.

Okay, where back,

how, what's the key

to using Zapier?

You have a list of tasks.

You have a list of apps

before you open the Zapier editor or start typing into Zapier's copilot,

the thing you wanna do, I want you to do this.

Go to zapier.com/apps,

zapier.com/aps.

This is the Zapier Explore Apps page,

and this

gives you everything you need to understand what Zapier can do for you.

In the beginning of the show. In the cold open, I talked about a restaurant, except

you need to build a menu with no other parameters.

This is like saying we want to be a Mexican food restaurant, or we want to serve

sushi.

Now you're working within some box.

The Zapier Explore apps page

allows you to search

for the apps you use.

So you can type in

Feedly if you use Feedly for RSS

or Instapaper. If you use Instapaper for bookmarking,

you can search for Calendly or cal.com.

You can search for kit, any of the apps that you use, search and see if they're available

in Zapier.

But

it goes one step. It goes many steps. Really further than that,

once you pick an app,

it will give you a few,

it will give you apps that you can pair with

apps that are commonly paired with the one you just selected.

It'll give you

automation ideas.

So it'll say, you know, if you pick, uh, Gmail for example,

it'll say, Hey, save new Gmail emails

matching a search to Google Sheets.

Or

when you label or star an email, send a Slack message about it.

So it'll start to give you ideas based on the apps that you use.

And then further down on the page,

it has a list of supported triggers and actions.

So you can actually see the triggers that kick off the automation.

You can see the actions that will be a result of the automation.

So now you can see what's possible.

You can see what you can do,

but I love when you choose an app to pair

it with.

It will allow you to select a trigger and an action. It'll, it'll suggest specific

automations for those app pairings, and you can reverse them, right? So if, if we're

saying,

let's say Google Sheets and Trello,

if we have Google Sheets as the trigger and Trello as the action, we can reverse

them and we can see what's possible with

Trello as the trigger and Google Sheets as the action.

So those three components, or those three

things you need

to do

to prevent blank Canvas syndrome

and get started with Zapier,

make a list of the stuff that you do,

the tasks that you perform on your computer.

Then make a list of the apps you use to accomplish those tasks.

Then head over to zapier.com/apps

and search for one of those apps to see what Zapier can do with that app.

Look at the triggers and look at the actions.

And

as I said in the beginning of the show,

if you're still thinking, well, I still don't know

you, you you wanna see, right? You wanna see examples of real world automations,

you don't wanna talk in academics,

head on over to streamlined fm slash quiz

because over at streamlined fm slash quiz,

I will ask you a few questions

and when you submit, I will email you four automations based on what you're struggling

with. And even if you're not using the apps, I'm suggesting you are seeing the type

of work that's being automated.

So seeing that paired with the Zapier apps page could be a really great way for you

to figure out what you can automate.

But that's it for this episode of the Streamline Solopreneur. It's a short one,

but a really focused one.

I do have a video where I walk through

the Zapier Explore apps page, so I'll link that in the show notes as well. You can

find all of the show notes over at streamlined FM or in whatever player you're listening

to this episode on.

If you have any feedback, you can head over to streamlinedfeedback.com.

Thanks so much for listening,

and until next time, I hope you find some space in your week.