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While you’re building, nothing runs on its own — you’re drafting. The moment you want your work to actually happen without you, you publish it. In Workmore you publish a section: a named bundle of one or more related workflows that you turn on together. Think of a section as “the set of processes that belong together.” Maybe your “new customer” section holds three workflows — welcome email, CRM update, and a team notification — all turned on as a unit.

Draft vs. published

  • Draft — you’re still shaping it. You can run it yourself to test, but it won’t run automatically.
  • Published — it’s live. Its triggers now start it on their own, every time.
This split is deliberate: you can change things freely while drafting, then publish when it’s ready. When you need to make changes later, you adjust and publish again.

Why a section, not just a workflow

A single workflow is one start-to-finish flow. A section lets you group the workflows that naturally belong together and manage them as one thing — turn them on, turn them off, see them together. If your work is one simple flow, your section just holds that one workflow. If it’s a few related flows, they ride together. Publishing is the step that turns “the work I do every Monday” into “the work that happens every Monday without me.” That’s the finish line for most processes — see the Quickstart for the full path there.