Fix-It Friday: 1-Hour Workflow Cleanup

Fix-It Friday: a 60-minute process to document, fix, and optionally automate any repetitive workflow so teams move faster - with SOPs, QA, and simple metrics.

8/25/20253 min read

A repeatable way to streamline how work gets done - in any business

If you ever feel like you are doing the same messy task again and again, Fix-It Friday is your new weekly habit. The idea is simple: pick one repetitive workflow, document how it really works today, fix the rough edges so it is simple and consistent, and - when it makes sense - automate the repetitive steps so they run without you. One hour, one win. Do this every Friday and you will build a small library of SOPs and automations that reduce errors, cut decision fatigue, and keep work moving no matter who is on deck.

TL;DR: Map a messy workflow -> simplify it -> template the steps -> optionally automate the repeats. One hour, one improvement, documented.

Pick Your Use Case (ideas to get rolling)

Choose something you touch weekly. Keep it small, obvious, and measurable.

  • Intake and triage for requests (from chat, email, or forms)

  • UTM link standards and a quick link builder

  • Weekly KPI snapshot -> team channel or email

  • Asset naming and folder sort rules

  • Approval reminders when items stall

  • Lead capture -> CRM with owner notifications

  • Meeting notes -> shared doc with decisions and actions

  • Customer praise -> testimonial bank

  • Content repurpose flow (webinar -> clips -> posts -> email)

Goals and Success Metrics

  • Goal (one line): What we are fixing and why it matters (time saved, fewer errors, faster approvals).

  • Success metric: Example targets: manual touches from 6 -> 1, save 30 minutes per day, or 100 percent of requests follow the new path.

Timebox (4 x 15 minutes)

  • 0-15: Map the current steps and pain points.

  • 15-30: Design the better flow (people, fields, rules).

  • 30-45: Build the template or automation and test twice.

  • 45-60: Ship the announcement, publish the SOP, and pin links.

Tools (use what your team already has)

  • Tracker: Google Sheets or your CRM

  • Docs or wiki: Notion, Confluence, or Google Docs

  • Project management: Asana, Trello, Linear, or Jira

  • Automation (optional): Zapier, Make, or built-in rules

  • Notifications: Slack, email, or in-app banners

0-15: Map the Current Workflow

Write the messy reality on one page. Keep it plain and specific.

  1. Trigger: What starts it? (new request, form fill, meeting, file upload)

  2. Inputs: What info is required to do it well? (goal, audience, deadline, owner)

  3. Path: What are the steps today? Who touches it? Where does it stall?

  4. Exceptions: What edge cases derail it? (missing info, too many approvers)

  5. Pain: Where do we copy paste, rework, or chase approvals? Pick one success metric and one non-negotiable rule. Example: If it is not in the form, it is not in the queue.

15-30: Design the Better Flow

Make the process boring and obvious.

  • Reduce steps: Remove anything that does not change the outcome.

  • People and roles: Who owns it? Who approves? One approver only.

  • Fields and standards: Decide field names, required vs optional, and naming rules.

  • Permissions: Who can create, see, and edit? Default to transparent when you can.

  • Data hygiene: Enforce formats (dates = YYYY-MM-DD, channels = dropdowns).

  • Error handling: What happens if something is missing? Bounce back with a friendly message. Sketch the new flow on paper first. If you plan to automate, outline Trigger -> Filters -> Actions -> Notifications.

30-45: Build the Template or Automation

You have two valid paths. Choose the one that fits your tools and time.

  • Template path (manual but fast): Create a reusable doc, form, or checklist with required fields and a tiny QA box. Save it in a shared folder.

  • Automation path: Use native rules or an automation platform to move info from A -> B, set owners and dates, and send confirmations. Test twice with dummy data. Confirm owners, dates, links, and labels are correct. If anything feels brittle, simplify.

45-60: Ship, Document, Announce

  • SOP (5-7 steps): Write the exact steps and link to the template or automation.

  • Short walkthrough: Record a 2-3 minute Loom or add screenshots.

  • Rollback plan: How to pause or undo if it misfires.

  • Announcement:

    New workflow live for [task]. From today, please use [link]. You will get an automatic confirmation and a link to track progress. Standard turnaround [X-Y days]. Rush = a trade-off.

  • Pin the links: Team channel and wiki. Add a footer line to emails and DMs with the new path.

Wrap-Up

One hour, one friction point, fixed - and now documented so it sticks. Next Friday, grab another from the ideas list and run the same cycle. Over a month you will build a small library of SOPs and simple automations that make your team faster without adding headcount. This works for marketing, sales, ops, support - anywhere you repeat a task more than twice.