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Zapier is duct tape. Your business needs plumbing.
Automation

Zapier is duct tape. Your business needs plumbing.

A pile of zaps is not an automation strategy. How zap sprawl happens, the symptoms it causes, and the migration path from patches to a real system.

J"

John "Holliday" Mahlow

Founder, Cursive Media

7 min readJun 14, 2026

Duct tape is a wonderful invention. It fixes the problem in front of you, right now, with no planning. Nobody has ever regretted duct tape on day one.

The regret comes later, when you notice the thing holding your operation together is forty pieces of tape applied by three different people, two of whom no longer work here. That is what an unmanaged Zapier account becomes — and it happens to smart teams, because every individual zap was a good decision.

How zap sprawl happens

No one designs sprawl. It accretes. Tuesday’s problem gets a zap. The new ad campaign gets a zap. The spreadsheet the owner likes gets a zap. A zap breaks, and rather than risk touching it, someone builds a second zap that patches around the first.

Each patch solved a real problem the day it shipped. But nobody ever zoomed out and asked what the system should look like — so there is no system. There is an accumulation.

The symptoms, in escalating order

  • Nobody can say what fires when. The documentation is the zap list itself, and the zap names are things like "New new lead flow FINAL v2".
  • Silent failures. A field gets renamed, a connection expires, and a workflow stops. You learn about it from an annoyed customer three weeks later.
  • Duplicate and circular updates. Two zaps disagree about which system is the source of truth, so contacts flip-flop between states depending on which ran last.
  • Key-person risk. One employee understands the wiring. Their vacation is an operational event; their resignation is an incident.
  • The bill nobody defends. Task usage grows every quarter — the Zapier tax — and no one can map spend to value.

If your automations broke right now, would you find out from an alert — or from a customer?

What plumbing looks like instead

The alternative is not "more sophisticated zaps." It is treating automation as infrastructure, the way you treat wiring in a building. Plumbing has four properties duct tape never acquires:

  • One source of truth. Contact and deal data lives in one system — usually the CRM — and everything else reads from it, rather than five tools each holding a slightly different customer.
  • Documented flows. Every workflow is written down in plain language: trigger, steps, owner, and what "working" means. If it is not worth documenting, it is probably not worth running.
  • Loud failure. Broken workflows page a human. Silent failure is the single biggest difference between amateur and professional automation, and it is why failure alerts get their own day in our 30-day roadmap.
  • An owner. A named person is responsible for the system. Not "whoever built it" — a role, so it survives turnover.

The migration path (no big-bang rewrite required)

You do not fix sprawl by declaring a rewrite. You fix it in four passes.

First, inventory. List every zap, what triggers it, what it touches, and whether anyone would notice if it stopped. Expect to find a handful already broken and several nobody can explain — turn those off first and see who shouts.

Second, group by job. Sprawl looks like forty zaps; it is usually six jobs — lead capture, follow-up, scheduling, invoicing, reviews, reporting — implemented forty ways.

Third, move each core job to the right layer: native integrations where they exist, platform workflows inside a system like GoHighLevel for the lead-appointment-review loop, and a small piece of custom code for the high-volume flows that deserve it. This is the same layering logic as the tool-stack math, applied to workflows instead of subscriptions.

Fourth, keep duct tape at the edges — genuinely low-stakes, low-volume connections where Zapier remains the fastest tool in the drawer. Plumbing for the load-bearing flows, tape for the trim.

The strategy part

An automation strategy is not a tool choice. It is a short list of decisions: what the source of truth is, which workflows are business-critical, how failures surface, and who owns the system. Make those four decisions and almost any toolset works. Skip them and no toolset will.

Untangling this is a core part of our automation practice — we audit Zapier setups, keep what earns its place, and rebuild the rest into something documented, monitored, and owned. If your zap list has become a load-bearing mystery, book a strategy call. We have seen worse. Probably.

J"

John "Holliday" Mahlow

Founder, Cursive Media

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