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Keep Automations Solid in Production
Here's a simple 10-point list on keeping automation solid in production: 1. Attach error notifiers: no silent failures. If something breaks, you should know in minutes, not when a customer complains. 2. Log everything meaningful: not just errors, but key steps too. When something goes wrong at 2am, you want a trail to follow. 3. Add retries with backoff: networks blip, APIs rate-limit, servers hiccup. A dumb retry with a small delay fixes half your "failures." 4. Set timeouts on everything: never let a step hang forever waiting on a dead connection or a stuck process. 5. Validate inputs before acting: garbage in, garbage automated. Check the data shape before your script trusts it blindly. 6. Make it idempotent: if a job runs twice by accident, it shouldn't duplicate orders, send double emails, or corrupt records. 7. Have a staging mode: test the automation on fake or sandboxed data before it touches anything real. 8. Set alerts on abnormal behavior, not just errors: a script can "succeed" and still be wrong, like sending 10x the usual emails or processing zero records when it should've processed thousands. Track volume and pattern, not just pass/fail. 9. Monitor rate limits and quotas: automation loves to hit API limits at the worst possible time. Track usage before it fails. 10. Review and prune regularly: automations rot. APIs change, business rules shift. Revisit them every few months so they don't quietly go stale.
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Questions
If you have any questions about the course or anything related to AI and automation, feel free to reach out to me directly or leave a comment below this post. Let's learn, build, and grow together as we explore the world of AI automations!
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The automation wave is here. Are you riding it or drowning in it?
Raise your hand if you've ever spent 2 hours doing something a machine could've done in 2 seconds.🙋 Yeah. Me too. For years. Then I discovered automation, and I haven't looked back since. Here's why I built this community and the 'Learn AI Automations - n8n' course RIGHT NOW and not 3 years from now: - 88%of companies now use AI/automation in at least one business function - $35B+ BPA market by 2030, doubling in 6 years - 97% of IT leaders say automation is essential for digital transformation The train is moving. The question isn't IF automation takes over, it's whether you're the one building it or the one being replaced by it. I chose to build it. I'm a silver medalist software engineer. I work professionally as an Automation Engineer. I've built systems that run 24/7, handle real money, and save real hour, for businesses and for myself. And I know something most people don't: 👉 You don't need to be a developer to do this. 👉 You don't need years of experience. 👉 You just need the right tool, the right teacher, and 30 days. That's exactly what the course is (will be launched this week). What's the ONE task in your day that you're most desperate to automate? Drop it in the comments below. I read every single one, and I might just build it as a live example inside the course. P.S. If you're reading this and you haven't introduced yourself yet, drop a quick hello in the Welcome post too. Tell us where you're from and what you do. We're a community, not just a course😜
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I'm glad to have you here. Let's get to know each other. You can follow this format: Hey, I'm from __________. I like to do ___________ for fun. Here's a picture of my workspace.
Welcome!🎉 Introduce yourself + share a pic of your workspace
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