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Flows Overview

Flows Overview

Overview

Flows are automated customer journeys that execute actions based on predefined customer behaviors and events.

Unlike campaigns, which are manually sent one time to a selected audience, flows run continuously in the background and automatically react when customers meet specific conditions.

Flows are commonly used for:

  • Welcome series
  • Abandoned checkout recovery
  • Post-purchase communication
  • Customer win-back campaigns
  • Engagement nurturing
  • Lifecycle automation

Once activated, a flow continuously monitors incoming customer activity and automatically executes the configured sequence of actions.

This allows businesses to deliver timely and personalized communication without manually sending messages.

Step 1: Open the Flows Section

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To access flow automation:

  1. Open the left navigation menu
  2. Click Flows

The Flows dashboard provides a centralized view of all automation workflows currently configured in EVA.

From this page you can:

  • create new flows
  • monitor active automations
  • review performance
  • manage existing flows
  • identify automation opportunities

Step 2: Understand the Dashboard Metrics

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At the top of the page, EVA displays key performance indicators that summarize overall flow performance.

Available metrics include:

Total Revenue

The total revenue attributed to flow automations.

Active Flows

The number of currently running flows.

Paused Flows

The number of flows that have been temporarily disabled.

Draft Flows

Flows that have been created but not yet activated.

Total Recipients

The total number of customers who have entered flow automations.

These metrics provide a high-level view of automation performance across the workspace.

Step 3: Review Flow Insights

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The Recommendations section highlights automation opportunities detected by EVA.

Recommendations may identify:

  • missing lifecycle automations
  • customer retention opportunities
  • revenue recovery opportunities
  • automation gaps

Each recommendation includes:

Recommendation Title

The automation opportunity identified.

Description

A summary of the business impact.

Confidence Score

An estimated confidence level for the recommendation.

Create Flow

A shortcut for creating the recommended automation.

These recommendations help teams identify valuable automations that have not yet been implemented.

Step 4: Manage Existing Flows

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Screenshot: Flow table with search, filters, and status indicators.

The lower section of the page contains the flow management table.

This area displays all existing flows and their current status.

Available information includes:

  • Flow Name
  • Status
  • Channel
  • Trigger
  • Revenue
  • Recipients
  • Last Updated

Users can also:

  • search flows
  • filter by status
  • filter by channel
  • filter by flow health
  • sort flow records

This table serves as the primary management area for all automation workflows.

Step 5: Understand Flow Statuses

Flows move through different operational states during their lifecycle.

Draft

The flow has been created but is not yet active.

Customers cannot enter the flow.

Active

The flow is running and processing customers automatically.

Paused

The flow has been temporarily disabled.

Existing configuration is preserved, but new customers will not enter the flow until it is reactivated.

These statuses help teams track deployment and automation readiness.

Step 6: Open Flow Details

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Selecting a flow opens its detailed performance view.

The flow detail page provides visibility into:

  • flow configuration
  • trigger setup
  • messaging steps
  • recipient activity
  • revenue performance

This view is used to monitor how a specific automation is performing over time.

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Step 7: Monitor Flow Performance

Each flow includes performance reporting metrics such as:

Revenue

Revenue generated by the flow.

Recipients

Customers who entered the automation.

Conversion Rate

Percentage of recipients who completed the desired action.

Revenue per Recipient

Average revenue generated per participant.

These metrics help measure the effectiveness of automated customer journeys.

How Flows Work

The flow lifecycle follows a simple automation process:

Customer Trigger

Customer Enters Flow

Flow Executes Steps

Messages Are Sent

Customer Activity Is Tracked

Performance Is Reported

Because flows operate automatically, they can continue generating engagement and revenue without requiring manual intervention.

Key Value Pillars

Automation

Flows execute actions automatically based on customer behavior.

Personalization

Customers receive messages relevant to their actions and lifecycle stage.

Scalability

Automations continue running without manual effort.

Revenue Recovery

Flows help capture revenue opportunities that may otherwise be missed.

Lifecycle Marketing

Flows support long-term customer engagement and retention strategies.