Hey,
Let me tell you the most annoying part of running a business online.
Everything works fine. Then one random day, something just stops working.
Your contact form stops sending leads. Your calendar stops sending reminders. Your payment notifications disappear.
You spend half a day fixing it. Or you pay someone to fix it. Two weeks later, something else breaks.
Here's what's really happening: all those apps you use are connected to each other in ways you don't see. When you change one small thing, it can quietly break something else.
The good news is… there's a stupidly simple way to stop most of this.
You just need to spend 20 minutes drawing a basic picture of what connects to what.
Let me show you exactly how.
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What an Integration Map Actually Is
An integration map is just a visual diagram that shows which tools in your business talk to each other, how they connect, and what data flows between them.
Nothing fancy. You can draw it in Google Slides, Figma, Notion, or even on paper.
The structure is simple:
Each tool is a box or circle.
Arrows show the direction data flows.
Labels on the arrows say what kind of data is moving.
For example, a basic setup might look like:
Typeform → Zapier → Google Sheets → Slack
The arrow from Typeform to Zapier says "New form submission."
The arrow from Zapier to Sheets says "Adds row with name, email, timestamp."
The arrow from Sheets to Slack says "Sends notification to team channel."
When it's all in your head or scattered across different platforms, you forget. When it's on one page, you see the whole picture.
Why Most Automation Breaks Happen
Most failures aren't because the tool is bad. They happen because something upstream changed and nobody realized it would affect something downstream.
Common examples:
You rename a field in your CRM. Now three Zapier workflows break because they're looking for the old field name.
You switch from one payment tool to another. Forgot that your invoicing automation pulled data from the old one.
Someone on your team disconnects a Google account to "clean things up." Turns out five automations were running through that account.
You update your form and add a new required field. Now your Zap can't handle submissions that don't have the old field structure.
None of these are obvious until they break. And when they break, you waste time hunting for the problem instead of knowing exactly where to look.
An integration map turns detective work into a five-minute glance.
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How to Build Your Integration Map in One Afternoon
You don't need to be technical to do this. You just need to trace your workflows from start to finish.
Here's a simple process:
Step 1: List every tool you use
CRM, email platform, payment processor, forms, scheduling tools, analytics, whatever you've got.
Step 2: Pick one core workflow
Start with something simple, like "What happens when someone fills out our contact form?"
Step 3: Draw the path
Box for the form tool. Arrow to wherever the data goes next. Another arrow to the next step. Keep going until the workflow ends.
Step 4: Add labels
Write what data moves at each step. "Name and email", "Payment confirmation", "File upload URL", whatever it is.
Step 5: Repeat for other workflows
Your email signups, customer onboarding, invoicing, reporting, whatever runs automatically in your business.
After an hour or two, you'll have a single diagram showing your entire tech stack and how everything connects.
What You'll Notice Immediately
Once you have the map in front of you, a few things become obvious:
Redundant connections. You'll spot places where data is being passed through three tools when it could go directly between two.
Single points of failure. If one tool is in the middle of five different workflows, you'll see it. And you'll know that if it breaks, a lot breaks with it.
Forgotten automations. You'll remember workflows you set up months ago and haven't thought about since.
Ownership gaps. You'll realize nobody on your team actually knows how certain connections work.
Most automation problems aren't technical. They're organizational. You just didn't know what was connected.
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When This Actually Saves You
The real value shows up in three situations:
When something breaks. Instead of guessing, you look at the map and trace the path. You know exactly where the failure is.
When you want to add something new. You can see what's already running and avoid creating duplicate workflows or conflicting automations.
When someone leaves your team. If they were managing certain integrations, you know exactly what they were responsible for and can hand it off cleanly.
I've seen businesses waste entire days troubleshooting automation failures that could have been solved in ten minutes with a simple map. It's one of those things that feels unnecessary until you need it, and then it feels obvious.
You don't need expensive software or a dedicated operations person to do this. You just need a little time and a willingness to draw some boxes and arrows.
If your tools keep mysteriously breaking, this is probably why. And fixing it is a lot easier than you think.
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Stay sharp,
Better Every Day






