Help center

Take 10 minutes.
Get hours back every week.

Short walkthroughs that turn the platform into your operations team: automated pipelines, instant follow-ups, AI-handled admin. One video, one less thing to do manually.

Automations· 1:24

How to Build & Trigger Automations

Walk through the automation builder — set triggers, add actions, and let the platform handle your repetitive tasks.

Automations are the backbone of a well-run CRM. Instead of remembering to send follow-ups, create tasks, or update records manually, you define the rules once and TrustPager handles the rest — every time, without fail.

The Automation Builder

Each automation has two parts: a trigger (what starts it) and one or more actions (what happens). The visual builder shows the flow clearly — trigger at the top, actions in sequence below.

Available Triggers

TrustPager supports a wide range of trigger types:

  • Stage Change — fires when an opportunity moves between pipeline stages. Note: stage-change automations work differently — they bind to a single pipeline stage and are managed from the pipeline page at https://app.trustpager.com/operations/pipelines. They do not support multiple triggers.
  • Form Submission — fires when a contact submits a form
  • Form Opened — fires the first time a recipient opens a form you sent them (before they submit). Use this to follow up while your form is top of mind.
  • New Contact Created — fires when a contact is added to the CRM
  • Deal Value Updated — fires when the opportunity value changes
  • Tag Added — fires when a specific tag is applied
  • Scheduled — fires on a time-based schedule (daily, weekly, etc.)
  • Webhook Received — fires when an external system sends data
  • Manual — fires when you click a button
  • Signature Opened — fires the first time a recipient opens a document you sent for signing (before they sign). Available under the Signatures trigger card.
  • Work Order Portal Opened — fires the first time a recipient unlocks the work order portal you sent them.

Open Tracking

TrustPager can tell you the moment a recipient opens something you sent them — a document, a form, or a work order portal. Three triggers cover these events:

  • Signature Opened — fires when a recipient first views a document sent for signing
  • Form Opened — fires when a recipient first opens a form you sent them
  • Work Order Portal Opened — fires when a recipient first unlocks a work order portal

Each trigger fires once per recipient — opening the same item again does not re-fire the automation.

Building an open-tracking automation

Open https://app.trustpager.com/auto/automations, create or edit an automation, and select the relevant trigger card — Signatures for document opens, Forms for form opens, or Work Order Portal for portal opens. Choose the Opened event within that card, then attach any action you like.

Common patterns:

  • Create a call task — assign yourself a task to call the recipient while the document or form is still open in their browser
  • Send an internal notification — ping a team member via email or Slack the moment someone opens
  • Suppress a follow-up reminder — use a branch condition so a Day-3 nudge only fires if the recipient has not yet opened

Variables available in actions

When an open-tracking trigger fires, the following variables are available in any action:

  • {{recipient_name}} — the name of the person who opened
  • {{document_title}} or {{template_name}} — the name of the document or form that was opened
  • {{opened_at}} — the date and time the recipient first opened

Activity timeline

Every open is also recorded as an activity on the linked opportunity's timeline — so you can see who opened what and when, even if you have not set up an automation for it.

Adding Multiple Triggers

A single automation can listen for more than one trigger at the same time. When any one of them matches, the automation fires — this is an OR relationship, not AND. You do not need separate automations for each entry point.

To add a trigger, open your automation in the builder at https://app.trustpager.com/auto/automations and click Add Trigger below the existing trigger card. You can mix trigger types freely — for example, a form submission trigger and an inbound webhook trigger can coexist on the same automation. When either fires, the full action sequence runs.

There is no enforced limit on how many triggers an automation can have, and no restrictions on which source types can be combined.

One exception — Stage Change: stage-change automations are tied to a single pipeline stage and are managed from the pipeline page, not the automation builder. They do not appear in the multi-trigger interface. All other trigger types support multiple triggers.

Available Actions

Each trigger can fire multiple actions in sequence:

  • Send an email or SMS
  • Create a task and assign it to a team member
  • Update a field on the contact, account, or opportunity
  • Send a Slack message to a channel
  • Call an external webhook
  • Create or update a document
  • Move the opportunity to another stage
  • Attribute Referral — link a new opportunity to an existing referrer contact, with automatic contact creation if the referrer is not yet in your CRM. See https://trustpager.com/help-center/attribute-referral-via-automation for the full walkthrough.

Stopping an Automation When a Step Fails

By default, if one action in an automation fails, the automation keeps going and runs the remaining steps anyway. Usually that is what you want. But sometimes a later step should only run if an earlier one succeeded. For example, you only want to enrol someone in a follow-up sequence if the step that generates their quote actually worked.

Every action has a Stop the automation if this step fails toggle on its card in the builder. It is off by default. When you switch it on, a failure on that step halts the automation and none of the steps after it run.

Order matters. Actions run from the top of the builder downwards, so the step you want to guard on must sit above the steps you want it to stop. To prevent a "send follow-up" step from running when a "get quote" step fails, put the "get quote" step first and turn its toggle on. If you turn the toggle on for the very last step there is nothing after it to stop, and the builder will tell you so.

When a run is halted this way, the run shows as Failed (if no earlier step had completed) or Partial (if some earlier steps completed), and the steps that did not run are marked as skipped in the run detail.

Run History

Every time an automation fires, TrustPager logs a complete audit trail: what triggered it, what data was used, which actions ran, and whether each step succeeded or failed. This makes debugging straightforward — you can see exactly what happened and why.

Tip: Start with simple automations (one trigger, one action) and add complexity once you see them working. The most impactful first automation for most businesses is a follow-up sequence that fires when an opportunity moves to a new stage.
The last piece

Two ways to
meet FinalPiece.

Talk to Evie right now, or book a real human for a deeper walkthrough. Whichever feels right.

01 · Talk to Evie

Pick up the phone.

Hear her in 10 seconds.

Evie
VOICEMeet Evie
  • RealHer voice passes for human.
  • SmartKnows your prices, hours, and trade.
  • PatientPolite, attentive, never has a bad day.
or
02 · Book a demo

Pencil us in.

60 minutes with a real human · Google Meet · Free.

June 2026
S
M
T
W
T
F
S
Loading…