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Dewx Guide

DewFlow Automation Guide: Build Workflows Without Code

Master DewFlow's visual workflow builder. From simple triggers to multi-step automations that replace hours of manual work every week.

What Is DewFlow?

DewFlow is the visual workflow automation engine built into the DEW Hub inside Dewx. It allows you to automate repetitive business processes by connecting triggers, conditions, and actions in a drag-and-drop canvas — no code required.

Think of DewFlow as your digital operations team. When a new lead fills out a form, DewFlow can automatically create a contact, send a welcome email, assign the lead to a sales rep, schedule a follow-up task, and notify your team on Slack — all within seconds, without anyone lifting a finger.

Unlike standalone automation tools like Zapier or Make, DewFlow lives inside your business platform. It has native access to your CRM data, inbox messages, invoices, and AI capabilities. No API keys, no connection management, no broken integrations.

What DewFlow automates:

Lead routing & assignment
Follow-up email sequences
Task creation & reminders
Deal stage transitions
Invoice generation on deal close
Team notifications (Slack, email)
Data enrichment & updates
Customer onboarding workflows

Core Concepts

Every DewFlow workflow is built from three fundamental building blocks: triggers, conditions, and actions. Understanding these concepts is essential before you build your first workflow.

A workflow always starts with a trigger (the "when"), optionally passes through conditions (the "if"), and ends with actions (the "then"). This simple pattern can model surprisingly complex business processes when you combine multiple branches and steps.

Triggers

The event that starts a workflow. Examples: new contact created, deal stage changed, form submitted, email received, scheduled time reached.

Conditions

Logic gates that control the flow. Examples: if deal value is above $1,000, if contact is in a specific segment, if email was opened within 24 hours.

Actions

The tasks that get executed. Examples: send email, create task, update field, move deal, generate invoice, call webhook, notify team.

Triggers Explained

Triggers are the starting point of every DewFlow workflow. When the trigger condition is met, the workflow fires automatically. DewFlow supports event-based triggers (something happens) and time-based triggers (a scheduled moment arrives).

Choosing the right trigger is the most important design decision in any workflow. A poorly chosen trigger can cause workflows to fire too often (wasting resources) or not fire when needed (missing important events).

Contact triggers

Fire when a contact is created, updated, tagged, or reaches a lifecycle stage. Use for onboarding flows and segment-based campaigns.

Deal triggers

Fire when a deal is created, moves stages, is won, or is lost. Use for sales automation, post-sale workflows, and win/loss analysis.

Communication triggers

Fire when an email is received, opened, clicked, or replied to. Use for engagement-based follow-ups and lead scoring.

Form triggers

Fire when a website form or survey is submitted. Use for lead capture, qualification, and routing.

Schedule triggers

Fire at a specific time — daily, weekly, or on a custom cron schedule. Use for reports, reminders, and periodic data cleanup.

Webhook triggers

Fire when an external system sends data to a DewFlow endpoint. Use for connecting third-party tools and custom integrations.

Actions & Steps

Actions are the work that DewFlow performs when a workflow executes. Each action is a single step — send an email, create a task, update a record. Complex workflows chain multiple actions together with delays and conditions between them.

DewFlow actions have native access to all Dewx modules. This means you can create a CRM contact, send an email from Portal, generate an invoice in OPS, and ask Dew AI to summarize the interaction — all in the same workflow.

Send email

Send personalized emails using templates with merge fields from contact data.

Create task

Assign tasks to team members with due dates, priorities, and linked records.

Update record

Change any field on a contact, deal, or company record automatically.

Move deal stage

Advance or move deals through your pipeline based on criteria.

Generate invoice

Create and optionally send invoices when deals close or milestones hit.

Notify team

Send Slack messages, in-app notifications, or SMS alerts to team members.

Wait / delay

Pause the workflow for minutes, hours, or days before the next step.

Call webhook

Send data to external APIs or trigger actions in third-party tools.

Conditional Logic & Branching

Conditional logic transforms simple automations into intelligent workflows. DewFlow supports if/else branches, multi-path splits, and loop constructs that let you handle different scenarios within a single workflow.

For example, when a new lead comes in, you might branch based on deal value: high-value leads get assigned to senior sales reps with a phone call task, while standard leads enter an email nurture sequence. Both paths live in one workflow.

If / Else

Check a single condition and route to one of two paths. The simplest branching pattern — use for binary decisions like "is deal value above $5,000?"

Common use: Lead qualification, VIP routing, geo-based assignment

Multi-branch

Check multiple conditions and route to the first matching path. Works like a switch statement — evaluate several criteria in order.

Common use: Industry-based workflows, multi-tier pricing, regional routing

Wait until

Pause the workflow until a condition is met or a timeout expires. Useful for waiting on external events like email opens or form submissions.

Common use: Engagement follow-ups, approval workflows, payment confirmation

Workflow Templates

DewFlow comes with a library of pre-built workflow templates for common business processes. Templates are fully customizable — they give you a working starting point that you can adapt to your specific needs.

We recommend starting with templates rather than building from scratch. Most businesses share 80% of the same automation needs. Templates capture best practices and save you from reinventing common patterns.

1

New lead welcome sequence

Triggered on form submission. Sends welcome email, waits 2 days, sends follow-up, creates task for sales rep if no reply.

2

Deal won onboarding

Triggered on deal stage change to "Won." Creates project, sends onboarding email, generates invoice, notifies delivery team.

3

Stale deal reminder

Runs on schedule. Checks for deals with no activity in 7 days. Sends reminder to deal owner and escalates after 14 days.

4

Lead scoring update

Triggered on email engagement. Increases lead score for opens and clicks, decreases for bounces and unsubscribes.

5

Invoice overdue follow-up

Triggered when invoice passes due date. Sends payment reminder, escalates at 7, 14, and 30 days overdue.

6

Team daily digest

Runs every morning. Compiles new leads, deals closing this week, overdue tasks, and sends a Slack summary to the team.

Advanced Techniques

Once you have mastered the basics, these advanced techniques unlock even more power from DewFlow. These patterns are used by businesses running sophisticated multi-step automations across their entire operation.

Workflow chaining

One workflow triggers another. Use this to break complex processes into smaller, reusable sub-workflows that are easier to maintain and debug.

Dynamic field mapping

Use variables and expressions to dynamically populate fields based on trigger data. Personalize emails, set custom values, and compute derived data.

AI-powered steps

Use Dew AI as a workflow step. Summarize emails, classify leads, generate responses, or score sentiment — AI becomes part of your automation.

Batch operations

Process multiple records in a single workflow run. Update all contacts in a segment, send bulk notifications, or run data cleanup across your database.

Error recovery paths

Define what happens when a step fails. Retry with exponential backoff, take an alternative path, or notify an admin. Never let a broken step break your process.

Testing & Debugging

Building a workflow is only half the job. Testing ensures it works correctly before it touches real customer data. DewFlow provides several tools to test and debug workflows safely.

Always test with sample data first. A workflow that sends emails to every contact in your database when you meant to target a specific segment is a mistake you only make once.

Test mode

Run any workflow with test data without affecting live records. DewFlow simulates every step and shows you the output at each stage.

Execution history

Every workflow run is logged with timestamps, step results, and data snapshots. Review past executions to understand exactly what happened.

Step-by-step preview

Preview each step before activating the workflow. See what data enters and exits every node in the chain.

Error alerts

Get notified when a workflow fails via email, Slack, or in-app notification. Errors include full context for quick diagnosis.

Version history

DewFlow keeps a history of workflow changes. Roll back to a previous version if an update causes issues.

Best Practices

Following these best practices will help you build workflows that are reliable, maintainable, and effective. These lessons come from thousands of DewFlow implementations across different industries.

Start simple, add complexity later

Begin with a 3-step workflow and validate it works before adding branches and conditions. Complex workflows built all at once are harder to debug.

Name your workflows clearly

Use descriptive names like "New Lead → Welcome Sequence → Sales Assignment" instead of "Workflow 1." Future you will thank present you.

Add delays between actions

Sending five emails in five seconds looks robotic. Add human-like delays between communication steps — 1-3 days between nurture emails is typical.

Set up error notifications

Always configure alerts for workflow failures. A silently broken workflow can mean missed leads, unsent invoices, or lost revenue for days before anyone notices.

Document your logic

Add notes to workflow steps explaining why each condition or action exists. When you revisit a workflow six months later, the documentation saves hours of reverse-engineering.

Why Choose DewFlow

DewFlow is not just another automation tool. It is the automation layer of your business operating system. Because it lives inside Dewx, it has advantages that standalone tools cannot match.

With standalone automation tools, you spend as much time maintaining connections as building workflows. API tokens expire, schemas change, rate limits hit. DewFlow eliminates this entire category of problems because it operates on native Dewx data.

For a deeper dive into how DewFlow fits within the broader AI capabilities of Dewx, see our Dew AI guide and the automation playbook.

DewFlow advantages:

  • Native access to CRM, inbox, finance, and AI — no API connections needed
  • Visual drag-and-drop builder — no code required
  • Unlimited workflows included in every Dewx plan
  • AI-powered steps using Dew for intelligent automation
  • Built-in testing, debugging, and version history
  • Template library for common business processes

DewFlow Automation Guide FAQ

Do I need coding skills to use DewFlow?

No. DewFlow is built for business users, not developers. The visual builder uses drag-and-drop blocks for triggers, conditions, and actions. If you can draw a flowchart, you can build a DewFlow automation. For advanced use cases, you can add custom JavaScript steps, but 95% of workflows use built-in blocks only.

How many automations can I run with DewFlow?

DewFlow does not limit the number of workflows you can create. Every Dewx plan includes unlimited workflows with a generous execution quota. Most SMBs run 10-30 active workflows covering lead routing, follow-ups, notifications, and internal operations without hitting any limits.

Can DewFlow connect to external tools?

Yes. DewFlow supports webhooks, API calls, and native integrations with tools like Slack, Google Sheets, and Stripe. You can trigger workflows from external events or send data out to other platforms. For most Dewx-internal automations, no external connections are needed since CRM, inbox, and finance are already on the same platform.

What happens if a DewFlow automation fails?

DewFlow includes built-in error handling. When a step fails, the workflow pauses and logs the error with full context. You can configure retry logic, fallback paths, and error notifications. The execution history shows every step with timestamps so you can debug issues quickly.

How does DewFlow compare to Zapier or Make?

DewFlow is embedded inside Dewx, so it accesses CRM, inbox, finance, and AI data natively without API connections. Zapier and Make require connecting each tool separately, which adds latency, cost, and failure points. DewFlow is best for automating within Dewx. For connecting to dozens of external tools, Zapier or Make may complement DewFlow.

Ready to automate your business?

DewFlow makes automation accessible to every team. Build your first workflow in minutes, not weeks.