The biggest misconception about automation is that it’s mainly about speed.
In reality, automation is first about clarity. If a process is unclear, automating it only makes the confusion happen faster.
Many people expect automation to fix messy workflows, poor decisions, or lack of structure. But automation simply exposes what’s already there — good or bad.
The real value comes when automation is used to reinforce a well-understood system: clear triggers, intentional decisions, and outcomes that actually matter. Speed becomes a side effect, not the goal.
Once that clicks, automation stops feeling magical and starts feeling reliable.
Curious — what was the biggest misconception you had about automation when you first started?