Describe what you need in plain English. Preview it against live data. Deploy it as a scheduled workflow. No drag-and-drop. No code. Just conversation.
Zapier, Make, n8n — they all start with a blank canvas and expect you to think in nodes, triggers, and API endpoints. Flow starts with a conversation and ends with a running workflow.
Four principles that make workflow creation feel like a conversation, not a chore.
No flowcharts. No node graphs. Describe what you want in natural language — "give me the local weather forecast every morning before I wake up" — and the system proposes a credible source, negotiates the schedule, and previews the output.
Every workflow runs a live preview against real data before you commit it. You see exactly what the output will look like — no guessing, no surprises. If the shape isn't right, refine it conversationally.
Flow doesn't just fetch data — it tells you where it comes from and why that source was chosen. A curated, credibility-ranked source registry means you always know what you're getting and can trust it.
Every workflow shows what it will do, what it just did, and every run result. The registry is your file browser — pause, resume, delete, or drop back into the conversation to amend any workflow at any time.
Here's what it looks like in practice.
I'll use the NWS Area Forecast Discussion — it's the raw meteorologist briefing from the National Weather Service. More detailed and trustworthy than aggregator sites.
I'll run this daily at 5:30 AM and deliver a concise summary. Want the full technical discussion or a plain-English briefing?
Here's a preview from today's data:
Want me to save this as "Morning Weather Briefing"?
Runs daily at 5:30 AM. You can view, pause, or edit it anytime from your workflows page.
Your agent already knows your business, your documents, and your preferences. Flow extends that context into recurring automations — so the workflows it builds are grounded in everything it already knows about you.
Book a 30-minute discovery call. We'll map your workflows and show you what Flow can do with your existing data.