Wire together email sequences, behavioral triggers, and lead scoring. Automate runs the campaign while the marketing team sleeps.
Methodology
We analyzed 1,240 campaigns across 380 accounts over six months. Campaigns using behavioral triggers (opened, clicked, visited within a defined window) were compared against time-based sends from the same sender domain.
The gap between manual and automated performance widens over time — not because the template improves, but because the audience model does.
Accounts that activated at least 3 behavioral triggers in month one retained 89% of their engaged list through month six. The median for manual sends was 61%.
* Aggregated from 1,240 campaigns across 380 accounts, Q1–Q2 2025.
Behavioral trigger = opened/clicked/visited within defined window.
Automated scoring recalculates on every behavioral event.
Benchmark data from 380 accounts running Automate for 90+ days vs. prior 90-day manual baseline. Segment accuracy measured against CRM ground-truth at deal close.
The stale segment problem
A segment tagged on Monday is wrong by Friday. Leads change jobs, visit pricing pages, open competitors' emails. Manual tagging captures a snapshot. Behavioral scoring captures the signal.
Automate recalculates every lead score on every behavioral event — page visit, email open, link click, form submit. The model is always current.
Every trigger you write retires a spreadsheet row.
"I replaced a 14-step Monday routine with two triggers. The first week I actually left the office before 7pm."
"Running 12 client accounts from one dashboard. Behavioral triggers catch intent signals I was missing in spreadsheets."
"Built the product, never built the funnel. Automate described the campaign in six lines and it started converting."
First trigger live in under 10 minutes. No spreadsheets. No manual sends. Just signals.