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Workflow (brief)

Workflow generally refers to a defined sequence of steps or tasks—often repeatable and routinized—used to complete a specific process or achieve an outcome. Workflows can be manual (people-driven), automated (software-driven), or hybrid.

Key points:

  • Steps: Ordered actions with clear inputs and outputs.
  • Roles: Who performs each step (person, system, or both).
  • Triggers: Events that start the workflow (user action, schedule, incoming data).
  • Conditions/Rules: Branching logic that changes the path based on data or decisions.
  • Artifacts/Outputs: Documents, files, notifications, or updated records produced.
  • Automation: Use of scripts, integrations, or workflow engines to reduce manual effort.
  • Monitoring: Logging, dashboards, and alerts to track progress and detect failures.
  • Optimization: Continuous improvement through metrics, bottleneck removal, and feedback.

Common types:

  • Approval workflows (e.g., document sign-off)
  • Content publishing workflows (draft review publish)
  • Onboarding workflows (employee or customer setup)
  • Incident response workflows (detect respond resolve)

Benefits:

  • Consistency, speed, reduced errors, clearer accountability, measurable performance.

If you meant a specific product or a code snippet in your HTML-like tag, tell me which one (e.g., macOS Shortcuts/Workflow app, GitHub Actions, Zapier, Power Automate) and I’ll give a focused description.

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