An AI-powered workflow for form submissions connects your form tool to an AI processing layer that reads each submission, classifies it by type or urgency, routes it to the right person or queue, and sends an automated response, all without human intervention for standard cases. Teams that process 50 or more form submissions per week typically reclaim 3-5 hours of manual triage work with a workflow like this. At aidowith.me, the Automation in Make route walks through building an AI-powered workflow for form submissions across 12 structured steps in about 2 hours. You'll connect your form to Make, add an AI module that classifies and enriches each submission, set up routing rules, and configure response templates. The result is a live workflow that handles your form traffic automatically from the moment you turn it on.
Last updated: April 2026
The Problem and the Fix
Without a route
- Someone on your team manually reads and routes 60-80 form submissions per week, spending 3+ hours on a task that adds no value and creates delays.
- High-priority submissions sit in a shared inbox for hours because there's no automated way to identify and escalate them.
- The auto-response your form sends is a generic confirmation, while the submitter waits for a real reply that could be generated automatically.
With aidowith.me
- An AI classification module in Make that reads each form submission and assigns a type, priority, and routing destination within seconds.
- Conditional routing logic that sends submissions to the right person or Slack channel based on the AI's classification, with no manual sorting.
- Personalized AI-generated response templates that send the submitter a relevant, specific reply within minutes of their submission.
Who This Route Is For
Ops & Analysts
Summaries, process docs, and structured output from messy inputs.
Managers & Leads
Reports, presentations, and team comms handled faster.
Marketers
Content, campaigns, and briefs done in hours instead of days.
How It Works
Map Your Current Form Submission Flow
Document what happens from the moment a form is submitted to the moment someone acts on it. Identify the 3 biggest time sinks in that process. This map becomes the blueprint for what the AI workflow replaces.
Build the AI Classification Module in Make
Connect your form to Make and add an AI module that reads the submission content and returns a structured classification: type, priority, and recommended action. Test it against 10 real submissions from your archive.
Configure Routing and Auto-Response
Set up conditional paths in Make that route classified submissions to the right destination. Add a response module that drafts and sends a personalized reply based on the submission content. Turn the workflow on and monitor the first 20 submissions live.
Build Your AI-Powered Form Submission Workflow
12 guided steps, about 2 hours. Walk away with a live Make workflow that classifies, routes, and responds to form submissions automatically.
Start This Skill →What You Walk Away With
Map Your Current Form Submission Flow
Build the AI Classification Module in Make
Configure Routing and Auto-Response
Personalized AI-generated response templates that send the submitter a relevant, specific reply within minutes of their submission.
"We process contact form submissions for 3 client accounts. Setting up this workflow meant we went from reviewing every submission manually to only touching the ones flagged as high priority. Saved my team about 4 hours a week."- Operations Manager, digital agency
Questions
A standard automation routes based on fixed rules: if the dropdown says 'support', send to the support team. An AI-powered workflow reads the free-text content of the submission, classifies it intelligently, and routes based on meaning, not just field values. It can catch urgency signals, identify the right department from an ambiguous description, and generate a personalized response, not just a template swap. The aidowith.me route builds this in Make across 12 steps.
The route covers integrations with Typeform, Tally, Google Forms, and Webflow forms through Make's native connectors. If your form tool has a webhook or an API connection, Make can pull from it. The AI classification layer works on any text-based form data regardless of the source tool. Most teams connect their existing form in the first 20 minutes of the route.
The aidowith.me Automation in Make route takes about 2 hours across 12 steps. That includes mapping your current flow, building the AI classification module, setting up routing logic, configuring auto-responses, and testing with real submission data. You finish with a live workflow, not a draft scenario. Most teams run it on their form within the same session.