Automation Route

Robotic Process Automation With AI: Eliminate Repetitive Work in Make

Traditional RPA requires scripting. AI-powered RPA in Make lets you automate multi-step workflows by describing what you want done. This route walks you through building your first one.

12 steps ~2h For operations Free

Robotic process automation with AI combines the task-chaining logic of traditional RPA with the flexibility of language models. Instead of writing scripts to handle every variation, you let the AI module interpret unstructured inputs and route them to the right action. At aidowith.me, the Automation in Make route covers 12 steps for building a complete AI-powered workflow: trigger, data transformation, AI processing, and output routing. You start by mapping a repetitive task you do manually, then rebuild it as an automated flow in Make with an AI step handling the variable inputs. The route takes about 2 hours. No coding required. You leave with a working automation running on your real data and a pattern you can apply to any similar task. Most users identify three or four additional automations they want to build before the route is done.

Last updated: April 2026

The Problem and the Fix

Without a route

  • You do the same five-step process every day and know it could run automatically, but don't know where to start.
  • Traditional RPA tools require scripting or expensive licenses. You need automation you can set up in an afternoon.
  • AI tools give great individual outputs but you're still manually moving data between steps.

With aidowith.me

  • Map your repetitive task, then rebuild it in Make with AI handling the variable middle steps.
  • Connect your tools: email, Sheets, Notion, Slack, or CRM, without writing a line of code.
  • Leave with a working automation on your real data and a pattern for building the next one.

Who Builds This With AI

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

1

Map your repetitive task

Document the exact steps you take manually, the inputs you start with, and the outputs you need. This becomes your automation spec.

2

Build the flow in Make

Connect your trigger and tools in Make, add the AI module for the variable processing step, and run a test on real data.

3

Handle edge cases and activate

Test the automation on edge cases, set up error routing, and turn it on to run automatically.

Automate Your Most Repetitive Work With AI

Follow the 12-step Make automation route and run your first AI-powered workflow by tonight.

Start This Skill →

What You Walk Away With

Map your repetitive task

Build the flow in Make

Handle edge cases and activate

Leave with a working automation on your real data and a pattern for building the next one.

"I automated a process I'd been doing manually every Monday for two years. Setup took about 90 minutes. Now it runs while I'm asleep."
- Operations lead, e-commerce company

Questions

AI-powered robotic process automation combines workflow automation, chaining steps between tools, with a language model that handles variable or unstructured inputs. Instead of scripting every variation, the AI interprets the input and routes it correctly. The Automation in Make route at aidowith.me builds this type of robotic process automation across 12 steps in about 2 hours with no coding required.

Not with Make. You build the workflow visually by connecting modules and the AI step handles variable processing. The Automation in Make route at aidowith.me is built for operations and business professionals without a technical background. No coding required. The route takes about 2 hours and produces a working automation running on your real data.

Make connects to hundreds of tools including Gmail, Google Sheets, Notion, Slack, Airtable, HubSpot, and most common SaaS products. The Automation in Make route at aidowith.me uses a practical example covering the most common connection patterns. You can adapt the same structure to any tool combination in your own workflow.