Advanced systems · Reliability layer
Ladder: Signal → Structure → Control → Reliability.
Automation Vault is the reliability layer: take systems that already work, reduce manual drag, add monitoring, and make them more durable over time.
Current Tentex flow: define the run, generate the working system in Studio, execute in your tools, then use Console to review signal and keep decisions grounded in visible thresholds.
Automation Vault
The reliability layer for systems that already work. Add automation, monitoring, retries, and operator notes so execution becomes more durable with less manual drag.
- • Automation workflows written to be implemented, not just admired.
- • Reliability-first thinking: monitoring, alerts, retries, and visible failure paths.
- • Built to protect working systems, not to automate random noise.
One-time purchase · Reliability layer · Built to extend working loops
New here? Start with the Signal Sprint Pack for the fastest first win.
If Money Pack gives you control, Automation Vault makes it durable. Reduce manual load, add monitoring, and keep loops stable without constant tinkering. Default to Intermediate; use Advanced when reliability, volume, or risk is high.
- • Implementable workflows (inputs → steps → outputs)
- • Retries + alerts + logging (know when it breaks)
- • Minimal maintenance patterns (avoid fragile automations)
You’ve built something that works — but it takes too much manual effort to keep it running.
- • You repeat the same steps every week (copy, follow-ups, reporting, admin).
- • Things break silently (missed follow-ups, lost leads, inconsistent delivery).
- • You’re scared to automate because it might create more problems.
- • You don’t have monitoring, so you only notice when results drop.
Automation Vault is the reliability layer: it turns repeated tasks into monitored workflows with clear failure handling and visible recovery rules.
The goal isn’t “automate everything.” It’s to automate the right 20% that protects revenue and reduces mental load — with visibility when something breaks.
Reliability systems you can actually run
Every workflow is written like an operator build spec: inputs, steps, branching logic, retries/alerts, and logging. Minimal maintenance is a feature, not an afterthought.
Clear inputs, expected outputs, and “definition of done” — so you can implement without guessing.
Conditionals for real life: missing data, no response, delayed payment, scope change, churn risk.
Built-in retry rules and notifications — you’ll know when something fails before revenue does.
What to record, where to store it, and how to audit health — so the system stays reliable over time.
Prefer simple, durable automations over brittle “everything-connected” builds. Clear failure modes. Clear stop rules.
Automation Vault is for builders who have signal — and now want reliability.
- • You’re running loops manually and want to reduce repetitive execution load.
- • You want alerts and visibility so failures don’t stay invisible.
- • You’re building a system you can sustain without burning out.
Use the tools you already have. The Vault focuses on implementation patterns, not tool lock-in.
- • A simple “source of truth” (Notion/Sheets/Airtable).
- • Email + calendar + basic automation tooling (optional but helpful).
- • A loop worth protecting (Money Pack is ideal before you automate).
Automation Vault is the durability layer — once your loop is working, it reduces manual execution and adds observability.
- • Start with Signal Sprint for the fastest first win.
- • Use Starter Bundle to launch with structure.
- • Use Money Pack to stabilise and control revenue with thresholds.
- • Then add Automation Vault to scale reliably with monitored workflows.
Automate what protects revenue and reduces load. Avoid fragile complexity. Track health.
Protect what already works.
If your system works but takes too much effort to run, Automation Vault helps you turn repeatable steps into monitored workflows with branching logic, retries, alerts, and logging.
One-time purchase · Reliability layer · Keep forever