An automation is a way to make two or more apps talk to each other automatically, so a repetitive task happens on its own instead of you doing it by hand every time. Add AI into the mix, and the automation can also think a little: read something, summarize it, or draft a reply, rather than just moving data from one place to another. None of this requires coding.
What an automation actually is
At its simplest, an automation is a rule: "when this happens, do that." When a new email arrives, save the attachment to a folder. When someone fills out a form, add them to a spreadsheet. When a new order comes in, send a thank-you message. You set the rule up once, and it runs quietly in the background from then on.
Trigger, action, and (optionally) AI
Nearly every automation has the same basic shape:
- Trigger. The event that starts things off. A new email, a form submission, a new row in a spreadsheet.
- Action. What happens next. Send a message, update a record, create a task.
- AI step (optional). This is what makes 2026-era automation different from the old rule-based kind. Instead of doing the exact same thing every time, an AI step can read the input and respond to what it actually says, drafting a tailored reply, summarizing a document, or deciding which of several actions makes sense.
A plain automation reacts the same way every time. An AI-powered one can actually understand what came in and respond appropriately. That difference is the whole point of adding AI.
The tools people actually use
You do not need to evaluate the entire market. Almost everyone starts in one of these places:
- Zapier is the most common starting point. It connects thousands of apps through simple step-by-step automations, and it is friendly enough that a beginner can build something useful in an afternoon.
- Make (formerly Integromat) is the natural next step once your automations need more complex logic, like branching paths or conditions. It has a steeper learning curve but handles messier workflows well.
- Custom GPTs and AI assistants can also act as a lightweight form of automation on their own, drafting the same kind of reply or summary every time you ask, even without connecting to another app.
Most people only ever need one of these to start. Pick the simplest option and grow into something more powerful only if you actually hit its limits.
Building your first automation
- Pick one repetitive task. Something you do the same way, often. Replying to a common type of email is a great first choice.
- Choose a tool. Start with the simplest option (like Zapier) rather than the most powerful one.
- Set the trigger and action. Decide exactly what starts it, and what should happen as a result.
- Add an AI step if it helps. Let AI draft the reply, summarize the input, or decide between a couple of outcomes, rather than hard-coding the same response every time.
- Test it before you trust it. Run it a few times, check the output is actually right, and adjust before you let it run unsupervised.
Give your automation a clear brief
Whatever AI step you add, a clear system prompt makes it far more reliable. The AI Prompt Builder writes one for you in minutes.
Open the AI Prompt Builder →A few beginner-friendly ideas
- Inbox triage. Sort incoming emails by topic or urgency, and draft a first-pass reply for the common ones.
- Meeting follow-ups. Turn raw meeting notes into a clean summary with action items, sent automatically to the team.
- Social content. Turn a blog post or update into a few caption drafts, ready to review and post.
- Lead follow-up. When someone fills out a contact form, send a personalized first reply within minutes instead of hours.
Frequently asked questions
No. These tools are built for non-technical people. If you can explain what you want to happen in plain language, you can usually build it.
Not quite. A standard automation follows a fixed path you set up. An AI agent takes a broader goal and figures out the steps itself, making more decisions along the way with less input from you. Agents are the next step up from simple automations.
Generally yes if you stick to reputable platforms. Be thoughtful about which accounts you connect, keep an eye on anything sensitive, and start with a human checking the results before you fully trust it to run unsupervised.
Most tools offer a free plan that is enough to try things out and handle light, everyday use. You typically only need to pay once your automations run often enough to outgrow the free tier.