Student Exercises: Triggers, Tasks, and Outputs
1. Build a workflow using this concept.
2. Add one improvement.
3. Add one signal‑driven trigger.
4. Document the workflow.
5. Reflect on how it evolves daily.
Student Exercises: Triggers, Tasks, and Outputs
1. Build a workflow using this concept.
2. Add one improvement.
3. Add one signal‑driven trigger.
4. Document the workflow.
5. Reflect on how it evolves daily.
Lesson: Building Your First Automation
• Understand the core idea behind Building Your First Automation • Learn how OpenClaw applies this concept
• Build a small workflow using this principle
• Practice applying it to your own system
Building Your First Automation is a foundational concept in OpenClaw. The goal is to break complex ideas into small, modular steps that can be automated.
OpenClaw uses a simple structure: Trigger → Task → Output. This allows you to build workflows that are easy to understand, easy to evolve, and easy to scale.
Start by identifying the smallest version of the idea. Then map it into the OpenClaw structure. Build it, test it, and refine it.
Example Workflow:
1. Trigger: A new signal appears in your dashboard.
2. Task: Analyze the signal and extract key data.
3. Output: Log the result and send a notification.
Practice Exercise:
Create a workflow that reacts to a daily event (like a scheduled time) and generates a small piece of intelligence for your system.
Building Your First Automation becomes powerful when applied daily. Small automations compound into large capabilities.
Build one small workflow today. Let OpenClaw evolve it tomorrow.
Today’s tutorial explores how to turn this idea into a working OpenClaw automation:
A tool for developers that solves tracking performance using workflow templates.
Start by breaking the idea into three parts: the trigger, the task, and the output.
The trigger starts the automation. The task is the action OpenClaw performs. The output is where the result goes.
Build the smallest version first. Ship it. Observe. Evolve.
A tool for ecommerce shops that solves automating repetitive tasks using AI‑powered dashboards.
Today’s tutorial explores how to turn this idea into a working OpenClaw automation:
A tool for ecommerce shops that solves automating repetitive tasks using AI‑powered dashboards.
Start by breaking the idea into three parts: the trigger, the task, and the output. This mirrors how OpenClaw structures every workflow.
The trigger is what starts the automation. It could be a scheduled time, a new email, or a signal from your PWA.
The task is the action OpenClaw performs automatically. This might be scanning a page, generating intelligence, or updating your dashboard.
The output is where the result goes — a log entry, a notification, or a data update.
Build the smallest version first. Ship it. Observe what happens. Then evolve it daily.
Today we’re turning this idea into a real OpenClaw automation:
A tool for ecommerce shops that solves automating repetitive tasks using AI‑powered dashboards.
OpenClaw breaks everything into three pieces: triggers, tasks, and outputs.
Choose your trigger — the event that starts the automation. Then define the task — the action OpenClaw performs automatically. Finally, choose the output — where the result goes.
Save it, run it, and evolve it. OpenClaw workflows grow with you.
ECOMMERCE SHOPS AUTOMATING REPETITIVE TASKS USING AI‑POWERED DASHBOARDS.
OpenClaw is how you turn “a tool for ecommerce shops that solves automating repetitive tasks using ai‑powered dashboards.” into a real automation without writing a backend.
OpenClaw automation
Trigger → Task → Output
Build small. Ship fast. Evolve daily.
1. Title card: “A tool for ecommerce shops that solves automating repetitive tasks using AI‑powered dashboards.” 2. Screen recording: OpenClaw dashboard
3. Highlight: Trigger selection
4. Highlight: Task configuration
5. Highlight: Output options
6. Save animation
7. Outro card: “OpenClaw — Automate Everything”
OpenClaw Tutorial: A tool for ecommerce shops that solves automating repetitive tasks using AI‑powered dashboards.
A tool for startups that solves simplifying onboarding using browser‑based automation.
Today we’re turning this idea into a real OpenClaw automation:
A tool for startups that solves simplifying onboarding using browser‑based automation.
OpenClaw breaks this into three pieces: triggers, tasks, and outputs.
Start with your trigger — what event starts the automation? A new email, a scheduled time, or a signal from your PWA.
Next, define the task. This is the action OpenClaw performs automatically, like scanning a page, generating intelligence, or updating your dashboard.
Finally, choose the output. This could be a log entry, a notification, or a data update inside your system.
Save it, run it, and evolve it. OpenClaw workflows grow with you — one small automation at a time.
STARTUPS SIMPLIFYING ONBOARDING USING BROWSER‑BASED AUTOMATION.
OpenClaw is how you turn “a tool for startups that solves simplifying onboarding using browser‑based automation.” into a real automation without writing a backend.
#OpenClaw #automation #saasfactory #nocode #workflow
1. Title card: “A tool for startups that solves simplifying onboarding using browser‑based automation.” 2. Screen recording: OpenClaw dashboard
3. Highlight: Trigger selection
4. Highlight: Task configuration
5. Highlight: Output options
6. Save animation
7. Outro card: “OpenClaw — Automate Everything”
OpenClaw: Automate your boring tasks
AUTOMATE YOUR BORING TASKS
OpenClaw is how you automate your boring tasks without hiring a team or writing a full backend.
#OpenClaw #automation #saasfactory #nocode #workflow
Does the reset automatically go to the latest OS because somethings are not running because the OS is too old I think it is about 15 and there is something like 25 now
Sent from Yahoo Mail for iPhone
On Wednesday, February 18, 2026, 9:27 AM, 3659745@gmail.com wrote:
Perfect! That is before the bingo games have started
Sent from Yahoo Mail for iPhone
On Wednesday, February 18, 2026, 8:35 AM, Leah Abelon <leah.abelon@guamcedders.org> wrote:
Hi Clifford, I maybe able to the Tamuning Senior Center, tomorrow morning around 9am,
—
Si Yu’os ma’åse’,
Leah Grace N. Abelon
CEDDERS Project Coordinator
Guam CEDDERS, Guam System for Assistive Technology
Office: +1 (671) 735-2493
abelonl
https://www.gsatcedders.org/The University of Guam is an equal opportunity provider and employer.
Perfect! That is before the bingo games have started
Sent from Yahoo Mail for iPhone
On Wednesday, February 18, 2026, 8:35 AM, Leah Abelon <leah.abelon@guamcedders.org> wrote:
Hi Clifford, I maybe able to the Tamuning Senior Center, tomorrow morning around 9am,
—
Si Yu’os ma’åse’,
Leah Grace N. Abelon
CEDDERS Project Coordinator
Guam CEDDERS, Guam System for Assistive Technology
Office: +1 (671) 735-2493
abelonl
https://www.gsatcedders.org/The University of Guam is an equal opportunity provider and employer.
Hi Clifford, I maybe able to the Tamuning Senior Center, tomorrow morning around 9am,
—
Si Yu’os ma’åse’,
Leah Grace N. AbelonCEDDERS Project CoordinatorGuam CEDDERS, Guam System for Assistive Technology |
The University of Guam is an equal opportunity provider and employer.