You don't need to overhaul everything to get started with workflow automation. Most people begin by tackling a single repetitive task—something they're already doing manually and sick of repeating. Pick that one annoying job, automate it, and you'll see the payoff immediately. The real magic happens when these automated workflows don't just stop at the planning stage. They keep running, handling the work end-to-end without constantly needing you to jump back in. That's where the efficiency gains become noticeable. Start small, prove the concept works on that one task, then scale from there.
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TokenToaster
· 22h ago
Haha, really. I was trying to automate everything in one go earlier, but after messing around for a long time, I didn't get anything done. It was only when I started with the most annoying repetitive task that I saw any results.
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LiquidityNinja
· 01-12 22:14
Damn, isn't this exactly what I've been doing all along? Starting from automating those annoying data reconciliations, now I'm finally liberated.
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Frontrunner
· 01-12 21:14
Haha, this is what I've been doing all along. Starting with the most annoying repetitive tasks, now my efficiency has skyrocketed.
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GateUser-00be86fc
· 01-12 21:13
Haha, as I always say, starting small is the most practical approach.
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Liquidated_Larry
· 01-12 21:08
Bro, you're right. Starting from a small pain point can really save effort.
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orphaned_block
· 01-12 20:59
Wow, finally someone is telling the truth. No need to mess with the entire system right away.
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NewDAOdreamer
· 01-12 20:55
Really, start automating a annoying small task first, and you'll see results very quickly.
You don't need to overhaul everything to get started with workflow automation. Most people begin by tackling a single repetitive task—something they're already doing manually and sick of repeating. Pick that one annoying job, automate it, and you'll see the payoff immediately. The real magic happens when these automated workflows don't just stop at the planning stage. They keep running, handling the work end-to-end without constantly needing you to jump back in. That's where the efficiency gains become noticeable. Start small, prove the concept works on that one task, then scale from there.