Monday has a way of arriving before you're ready for it. The weekend wraps up, you make a mental note to "get organized," and then suddenly it's 8:47am and you're already behind on three things that didn't exist on Friday.
The problem isn't that you're unproductive. It's that too much of your day gets spent on the kind of low-effort, high-frequency tasks that feel small but still eat up hours. Replying to routine emails. Remembering to post on LinkedIn. Googling what to cook this week. Drafting a Slack update that says roughly the same thing it said last Monday.
AI can handle all of it. That's exactly what IFTTT is built for, connecting over 1000 apps and services so you can set up automations once and let them do the repetitive work for you. Not someday, but right now, with Applets that take about two minutes to set up and start working immediately.
Here are five ways to make that happen.
1. Set the tone before Monday sets it for you
The morning hours are either yours or they belong to your notifications. The difference mostly comes down to what you do in the first 20 minutes after waking up.
Instead of reaching for your phone and immediately falling into whatever someone else needed from you last night, imagine starting the day with something that was built specifically for you. A personal intention that matches how your brain actually works. A horoscope waiting in your inbox or as a push notification, whether you take it literally or just use it as a moment to pause before the day starts.
A poem that has nothing to do with your inbox. A meal plan waiting in your email so "what's for dinner this week" is already answered before you even thought to ask.
And if football is part of how you decompress, the latest NFL news from ESPN is already sitting there too.
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✨ Daily ENFP morning intention email
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Get a daily poem notification from IFTTT
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Send a weekly meal plan by Email
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Get IFTTT mobile alerts for new ESPN NFL posts
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Daily Horoscope Message
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Morning Horoscope Email Digest
2. Never write another routine email response from scratch
There is a category of email that every professional knows well. It requires a response. The response isn't complicated. And yet somehow it still takes ten minutes to draft because you're staring at the screen trying to find the right opening line that isn't "Hope this finds you well."
AI is genuinely good at this. Not because it writes better than you, but because it removes the friction of starting. Tag an email with a specific label and get a full draft response back in seconds. Flag something with #ChatGPT and the reply is waiting before you've had a chance to overthink it. Paste a draft into IFTTT and Claude will proofread it for grammar, clarity, and tone before it ever reaches anyone's inbox.
And for everything that happened in a meeting, the decisions, the follow-ups, the things someone said they'd own but you're not sure they wrote down, drop your notes into a Google Doc and let AI pull out the summary, the key takeaways, and the action items. Then it emails the results to you automatically.
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Get an AI email reply when you tag a message
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Automatically generate ChatGPT response to emails when you tag them #ChatGPT
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Send your email to Claude for proofreading via IFTTT
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Email AI meeting summaries from new Google Docs notes
3. Keep your team and customers on the same page, automatically
Consistent communication is one of those things that everyone agrees matters, and almost everyone struggles to maintain when things get busy. The daily Slack update gets skipped. The Google review from Tuesday is still sitting there unanswered. The form responses from last week's survey are somewhere in a spreadsheet that nobody has touched.
Automating the routine parts of communication doesn't make it feel less genuine, it actually makes it more consistent, which is usually what people appreciate most. Your team gets the update they were expecting. Your customers hear back from you quickly. Your form data is already organized before you've had a chance to forget about it.
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Send daily Slack message automatically
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Auto-reply to new Google Business Profile reviews
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Use ChatGPT to auto-reply to new Google Business reviews
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Add new Google Forms responses and AI summaries to Google Sheets
4. Build a content engine that runs while you work
Staying visible online, on LinkedIn, on Facebook, across your blog, requires a level of consistency that's hard to maintain when content creation is just one of fifteen things on your plate. Most people don't fall off because they run out of ideas. They fall off because the execution takes longer than expected and something else always feels more urgent.
The fix isn't a complicated content calendar. It's removing as many steps between "new content exists" and "it's published and shared" as possible. When you publish a new blog post, it should show up on LinkedIn and Facebook the same day without you having to log in anywhere. When you need a fresh idea for a social post, a quick note to yourself should be enough to kick off an AI-generated suggestion. And when you come across an article worth saving, you should be able to get the key points without reading the whole thing.
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Get AI social media ideas from a new Note widget entry
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Post new blog entries to your Facebook Page automatically
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Post new RSS blog updates to LinkedIn automatically
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Email AI summary when you star an article in Inoreader
5. Wind down with intention, wake up ahead
The end of the workday gets treated like a finish line, but it's also when a lot of the next day gets decided. Whether you take five minutes to reflect on what actually got done, or whether you log off mid-thought and spend the evening vaguely stressed about something you can't quite name, makes a real difference in how Tuesday morning feels.
This last set of Applets is about wrapping up the day. Getting a nudge that the day had value. Letting articles and news come to you in a format that informs without overwhelming. So that by the time Monday rolls back around, you're already a step ahead of it.
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Get a daily end‑of‑work message from Claude via IFTTT
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Add new Longreads posts to your weekly email digest
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Email Claude summary when new Google Doc is added
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Get NY Times Politics summaries via IFTTT notifications
Your Monday is about to get a lot easier
The goal was never to automate your entire life. It was to stop spending your best hours on the tasks that don't need you. Pick one section that fits where you are right now, get it running on IFTTT in a couple of minutes, and notice what it frees up. That's the whole thing.
