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How to Automate Repetitive Tasks
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Take back control of your time
Letās face it.
There is no such thing ālack of timeā.
There is ālack of systems.ā
This simple truth applies to everyone, including newsletter operators.
Running a newsletter might seem easy.
However, it involves many small, repetitive tasks. They can easily make you lose control of your time.
Feeling overwhelmed by these tasks?
Fortunately, Mike Cardona, also known as an āautomation alchemistā, comes to the rescue. Mike helps digital creators save 20+ hours a month. He is also the mind behind the Hidden Levers AI newsletter & community.
I asked him:
Imagine that I run my newsletter business with manual work. Iām eager to introduce automations but lack the know-how.
Where should I begin?
He explained:
How to adopt an automation mindset
Steps to follow for automating a task using a real-life example
Choosing the right tools when starting out
A big thank you to Mike for sharing this insightful guideline.
Now, Iāll pass the mic to him. Enjoy!
Automation allows newsletter operators to remove the tedious and repetitive work so as to focus on stuff that matters: writing, engaging, learning, and distribution.
While starting out,
āOne of the best things to do is adopt an āautomation mindsetā and proactively look for ways to run your newsletter more efficiently.ā
You donāt need to have it all figured out.
For example, my friend Christine would spend 30-45 minutes every week manually reviewing emails and adding them to her swipe file Airtable database.
Here is her manual process before the automation:
When she received an email in Gmail that she wanted to add to her swipe file collection, she added the "swipe file" label to the email.
Then every Sunday she reviewed those labeled emails and manually added them to her Airtable database.
This task, while seemingly minor, takes up a significant chunk of time that could be better spent on more impactful activities such as content creation or engaging with her audience.
āA proactive automation-first mindset means finding a solution before it becomes a problem.ā
Here is what Iād recommend:
Step 1: Identify Repetitive Tasks
Use a time-tracking tool to log all the tasks related to your newsletter creation process.
Track your time for at least 1-2 newsletter issues so you have enough data to analyze.
This will give you a clear picture of where your time is being spent on writing, research, design, promotion, etc.
With enough task-level data, you'll be able to identify the repetitive workflows that are good automation candidates to help streamline your process.
I like to use Rize.io.
Alternatives: Toggl or RescueTime
Review the tasks that consume a lot of time and you repeat often.
Aim for 5-10 tasks. Simple automation candidates:
Sharing social media posts
Adding data to spreadsheets
Managing files across apps
Focus on repetitive tasks, follow the same steps, and donāt require human intervention.
Note: Some automations require humans and robots to work together. If youāre starting out, itās best to aim for easy automation that only robots do.
Remember: before trying to automate something, ask yourself: "Do I really need to do this in the first place?"
Eliminate anything that isnāt necessary.
Step 2: Break Down Tasks into Core Components
After reviewing the tasks, pick 1-3 tasks from your list and answer these questions. Iāve used Christine as an example:
When do you normally do this task? What "triggers" you to do it?
> Every Sunday when I review emails to add to my swipe file.
What are all the steps you need to take to complete it?
> Review Gmail for emails with "swipe file" label
> Open each email and review if it should go into my swipe file
> Manually copy and paste email content into my Airtable swipe file database
What apps do you use to complete each of the steps?
> Gmail - Reviewing emails
> Gmail - Reading email content
> Airtable - Adding email to swipe file database
Breaking down Christine's workflow into these components makes it clear when and where manual repetitive work happens.
Step 3: Define Triggers and Actions
Next, understanding the core concept of how automation is built is key.
Every automation begins with a trigger and has an action.
Multi-step automations have more than one action. This is true regardless of the tool you use.
Letās take Christineās workflow after itās broken down and use this āAutomation Recipeā:
"When X happens, then do Y," this is what we come up with:
When a new email is labeled "Swipe File" (in Gmail), add the email to Airtable.
Broken down into components we get:
Trigger: When a new email in Gmail gets the "swipe file" label (X happens)
Action 1: Extract email content like subject, body text, attachments, etc. (first Y task)
Action 2: Add the extracted email content to my Airtable swipe file database (second Y task)
āThis trigger > action(s) framework is key to automating any repetitive task.
It helps reveal what event kicks things off, what exact steps need to happen, and what apps need to talk to each other at each step.ā
Step 4: Map Key Data Points
Now that weāve mapped out Christine's workflow, the next step is looking at data points.
For example, in Christine's case, the key data points we need to map are:
Email subject ā Airtable record (āsubject lineā)
Email body ā Airtable record (ācontentā)
Email attachments ā Airtable record (āattachmentsā)
The point is - you need to articulately define each data type you want to be captured from the trigger app and where exactly it should go in the destination app.
āThis data point matching ensures information flows accurately across your automation.
It's easy to miss but critical to avoid issues down the line.ā
Tools for Starting Automation
Choose a tool that integrates with your current tech stack and that you're comfortable using.
The 2 main players are Zapier and Make.
Zapier is easier to use but more pricey. Use it if youāre non-technical and want to quickly build an automation.
Make allows for more complex workflows and is cheaper. Use it if youāre comfortable with tech.
Both Zapier and Make have resources to learn:
Prioritizing Automation
Use the Impact/Effort (Eisenhower) Matrix to prioritize which automations to build.
Start with the simplest automation you can quickly build to gain momentum.
Google search āZapier (app name) + Integrationsā which tool integrates with your app once you know which automations youāll build.
ā(Automation tool name) + (App name) + Integrationsā
Thatās all for today.
See you on Sunday with my full interview with Mike Cardona about how he built Hidden Levers AI:
Facing fears: How he started creating content
Boosting growth: Key strategies
Paid subscription: Initial experience & learnings
Automation insights: His favorites
Key Learnings: What he would do differently if he started over
āMy biggest fear was what others would think about my work. Worrying thoughts like - what if my writing sucked or no one liked it?
Essentially, I built it up bigger in my head than it needed to be.
As Tim Ferriss says, what we fear and dread the most is often exactly what we need to do.ā
Donāt miss it!
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