Combine Apps

Combine Apps

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Intercom

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Intercom

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Intercom

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Intercom

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Google Sheets Integration

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Google Sheets Integration

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Google Sheets Integration

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Google Sheets Integration

Build automations powered by V7 Go Agents

Connect Salesforce to Bloomerang with

Connect Salesforce to Bloomerang with

Connect Salesforce to Bloomerang with

Every new Intercom conversation fires an AI analytics pipeline that reads the interaction type and customer context, classifies the engagement signal, and logs a clean structured row to Google Sheets — giving your success and product teams a real-time conversation analytics tracker.

Example Workflow

Example Workflow

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Intercom

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Intercom

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Intercom

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+

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Google Sheets

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Google Sheets

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Google Sheets

Conversation to Analytics Sheet

Conversation to Analytics Sheet

Conversation to Analytics Sheet

Popular workflows

Example

Input

New conversation

AI Agent

Output

Input

New conversation

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New Conversations

Emit new event each time a new conversation is added.

Conversation Record

.

AI Agent

Analyze

Reading customer name, email, company, conversation content, and engagement type from Intercom

Classifying the conversation type: support, sales, onboarding, product feedback, or churn signal

Assessing customer health indicators: engagement level, sentiment, and satisfaction signals

Extracting product area or feature referenced for product analytics attribution

Structuring all fields as a clean Google Sheets row with standardised conversation analytics headers

Analysis complete

Output

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Google Sheets

Appends a structured conversation analytics row with customer name, company, conversation type classification, customer health signal, sentiment assessment, product area, engagement level, and timestamp to the designated Google Sheets conversation log

All actions triggered by agent

Log every Intercom conversation to Google Sheets with AI-classified interaction type, customer health signal, and engagement context — building your customer analytics database automatically.

Log every Intercom conversation to Google Sheets with AI-classified interaction type, customer health signal, and engagement context — building your customer analytics database automatically.

Log every Intercom conversation to Google Sheets with AI-classified interaction type, customer health signal, and engagement context — building your customer analytics database automatically.

Agent Library

Agent Library

A library of

A library of

A library of

Agents

Agents

Agents

for every workflow

for every workflow

for every workflow

More conversation analytics agents

More conversation analytics agents

More conversation analytics agents

Actions & Triggers

Actions & Triggers

Build powerful

Build powerful

Build powerful

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Intercom

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Intercom

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Intercom

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Google Sheets workflows

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Google Sheets workflows

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Google Sheets workflows

Pick from 100+ triggers and actions available.

Pick from 100+ triggers and actions available.

Connect triggers from Zoom to powerful actions in your other business apps.

Enterprise-grade security

Your data stays yours—always. Work with one of the few AI companies that never trains on your data.

  • No training on your data

  • Encrypted end-to-end

  • Audited and penetration-tested

  • Fine-grained access controls

  • Inhouse security team

  • Audit logs across every workflow

Enterprise-grade security

Your data stays yours—always. Work with one of the few AI companies that never trains on your data.

  • No training on your data

  • Encrypted end-to-end

  • Audited and penetration-tested

  • Fine-grained access controls

  • Inhouse security team

  • Audit logs across every workflow

Enterprise-grade security

Your data stays yours—always. Work with one of the few AI companies that never trains on your data.

  • No training on your data

  • Encrypted end-to-end

  • Audited and penetration-tested

  • Fine-grained access controls

  • Inhouse security team

  • Audit logs across every workflow

Enterprise-grade security

Your data stays yours—always. Work with one of the few AI companies that never trains on your data.

  • No training on your data

  • Encrypted end-to-end

  • Audited and penetration-tested

  • Fine-grained access controls

  • Inhouse security team

  • Audit logs across every workflow

Have questions?

Find answers.

Any more questions?

How does V7 Go differ from tools like Zapier or Make?

Zapier and Make are useful when you want apps to react to events in each other. They’re built around triggers and simple data handoffs. V7 Go sits at a different layer. It focuses on document-heavy workflows where the outcome depends on what’s inside the file. Its agents can read a document, extract what matters, use information stored in your workspace, and then act inside your connected apps. In practice, it means Zapier or Make can still be part of your stack, but the purpose of each tool is different. For example, if Zapier handles the wiring, V7 Go can handles the logic that depends on the contents of the document.

How do I connect integrations to V7 Go?

V7 Go includes built-in connectors that link to a growing library of more than four hundred applications. These connectors work through triggers and skills. Triggers are events happening inside external apps that V7 Go can listen to, so when something changes in that app, an agent can start working. Skills are the actions V7 Go can take inside those external apps, whether that’s retrieving information, updating data, or using some feature of the app during a workflow.

Beyond the connector library, the platform can also link to any software that exposes an API endpoint. If an app supports HTTP requests, V7 Go can talk to it through webhooks or API calls. This is often the preferred method for teams working with industry-specific or niche tools that will never have an off-the-shelf integration. Setting these up usually only involves pointing V7 Go at the right endpoint and passing the credentials the system requires.

How does pricing work for integrations?

V7 Go includes built-in connectors that link to a growing library of more than four hundred applications. These connectors work through triggers and skills. Triggers are events happening inside external apps that V7 Go can listen to, so when something changes in that app, an agent can start working. Skills are the actions V7 Go can take inside those external apps, whether that’s retrieving information, updating data, or using some feature of the app during a workflow.

Beyond the connector library, the platform can also link to any software that exposes an API endpoint. If an app supports HTTP requests, V7 Go can talk to it through webhooks or API calls. This is often the preferred method for teams working with industry-specific or niche tools that will never have an off-the-shelf integration. Setting these up usually only involves pointing V7 Go at the right endpoint and passing the credentials the system requires.

What can V7 Go’s agents do once integrations are connected?

Once integrations are active, the agents can work end-to-end across documents and external systems. They can read files, extract structured information, and use additional context from the documents stored in your workspace. They can also perform actions inside the apps you’ve connected, whether that’s updating a record, retrieving additional data, sending a message, or running a task that depends on the contents of the document. You can design workflows where an incoming file automatically triggers an agent, the agent completes the work, and the results show up exactly where your team needs them.

What are Knowledge Hubs, and how do they relate to integrations?

Knowledge Hubs are where your documents live inside V7 Go. When you sync files from places like Google Drive or SharePoint, or upload them directly, they’re not just stored—they’re indexed. That indexing is important, because it means the AI can work with a large library of documents and decide, on its own, which ones are relevant to the task at hand. If an agent needs background information, a definition, a policy, a previous contract, or anything else buried in your files, it can pull the right pieces as it works. This gives your workflows the ability to reference your institutional knowledge without having to hard-code every rule or document location.

Have questions?

Find answers.

Any more questions?

How does V7 Go differ from tools like Zapier or Make?

Zapier and Make are useful when you want apps to react to events in each other. They’re built around triggers and simple data handoffs. V7 Go sits at a different layer. It focuses on document-heavy workflows where the outcome depends on what’s inside the file. Its agents can read a document, extract what matters, use information stored in your workspace, and then act inside your connected apps. In practice, it means Zapier or Make can still be part of your stack, but the purpose of each tool is different. For example, if Zapier handles the wiring, V7 Go can handles the logic that depends on the contents of the document.

How do I connect integrations to V7 Go?

V7 Go includes built-in connectors that link to a growing library of more than four hundred applications. These connectors work through triggers and skills. Triggers are events happening inside external apps that V7 Go can listen to, so when something changes in that app, an agent can start working. Skills are the actions V7 Go can take inside those external apps, whether that’s retrieving information, updating data, or using some feature of the app during a workflow.

Beyond the connector library, the platform can also link to any software that exposes an API endpoint. If an app supports HTTP requests, V7 Go can talk to it through webhooks or API calls. This is often the preferred method for teams working with industry-specific or niche tools that will never have an off-the-shelf integration. Setting these up usually only involves pointing V7 Go at the right endpoint and passing the credentials the system requires.

How does pricing work for integrations?

V7 Go includes built-in connectors that link to a growing library of more than four hundred applications. These connectors work through triggers and skills. Triggers are events happening inside external apps that V7 Go can listen to, so when something changes in that app, an agent can start working. Skills are the actions V7 Go can take inside those external apps, whether that’s retrieving information, updating data, or using some feature of the app during a workflow.

Beyond the connector library, the platform can also link to any software that exposes an API endpoint. If an app supports HTTP requests, V7 Go can talk to it through webhooks or API calls. This is often the preferred method for teams working with industry-specific or niche tools that will never have an off-the-shelf integration. Setting these up usually only involves pointing V7 Go at the right endpoint and passing the credentials the system requires.

What can V7 Go’s agents do once integrations are connected?

Once integrations are active, the agents can work end-to-end across documents and external systems. They can read files, extract structured information, and use additional context from the documents stored in your workspace. They can also perform actions inside the apps you’ve connected, whether that’s updating a record, retrieving additional data, sending a message, or running a task that depends on the contents of the document. You can design workflows where an incoming file automatically triggers an agent, the agent completes the work, and the results show up exactly where your team needs them.

What are Knowledge Hubs, and how do they relate to integrations?

Knowledge Hubs are where your documents live inside V7 Go. When you sync files from places like Google Drive or SharePoint, or upload them directly, they’re not just stored—they’re indexed. That indexing is important, because it means the AI can work with a large library of documents and decide, on its own, which ones are relevant to the task at hand. If an agent needs background information, a definition, a policy, a previous contract, or anything else buried in your files, it can pull the right pieces as it works. This gives your workflows the ability to reference your institutional knowledge without having to hard-code every rule or document location.

Have questions?

Find answers.

How does V7 Go differ from tools like Zapier or Make?

Zapier and Make are useful when you want apps to react to events in each other. They’re built around triggers and simple data handoffs. V7 Go sits at a different layer. It focuses on document-heavy workflows where the outcome depends on what’s inside the file. Its agents can read a document, extract what matters, use information stored in your workspace, and then act inside your connected apps. In practice, it means Zapier or Make can still be part of your stack, but the purpose of each tool is different. For example, if Zapier handles the wiring, V7 Go can handles the logic that depends on the contents of the document.

How do I connect integrations to V7 Go?

V7 Go includes built-in connectors that link to a growing library of more than four hundred applications. These connectors work through triggers and skills. Triggers are events happening inside external apps that V7 Go can listen to, so when something changes in that app, an agent can start working. Skills are the actions V7 Go can take inside those external apps, whether that’s retrieving information, updating data, or using some feature of the app during a workflow.

Beyond the connector library, the platform can also link to any software that exposes an API endpoint. If an app supports HTTP requests, V7 Go can talk to it through webhooks or API calls. This is often the preferred method for teams working with industry-specific or niche tools that will never have an off-the-shelf integration. Setting these up usually only involves pointing V7 Go at the right endpoint and passing the credentials the system requires.

How does pricing work for integrations?

V7 Go includes built-in connectors that link to a growing library of more than four hundred applications. These connectors work through triggers and skills. Triggers are events happening inside external apps that V7 Go can listen to, so when something changes in that app, an agent can start working. Skills are the actions V7 Go can take inside those external apps, whether that’s retrieving information, updating data, or using some feature of the app during a workflow.

Beyond the connector library, the platform can also link to any software that exposes an API endpoint. If an app supports HTTP requests, V7 Go can talk to it through webhooks or API calls. This is often the preferred method for teams working with industry-specific or niche tools that will never have an off-the-shelf integration. Setting these up usually only involves pointing V7 Go at the right endpoint and passing the credentials the system requires.

What can V7 Go’s agents do once integrations are connected?

Once integrations are active, the agents can work end-to-end across documents and external systems. They can read files, extract structured information, and use additional context from the documents stored in your workspace. They can also perform actions inside the apps you’ve connected, whether that’s updating a record, retrieving additional data, sending a message, or running a task that depends on the contents of the document. You can design workflows where an incoming file automatically triggers an agent, the agent completes the work, and the results show up exactly where your team needs them.

What are Knowledge Hubs, and how do they relate to integrations?

Knowledge Hubs are where your documents live inside V7 Go. When you sync files from places like Google Drive or SharePoint, or upload them directly, they’re not just stored—they’re indexed. That indexing is important, because it means the AI can work with a large library of documents and decide, on its own, which ones are relevant to the task at hand. If an agent needs background information, a definition, a policy, a previous contract, or anything else buried in your files, it can pull the right pieces as it works. This gives your workflows the ability to reference your institutional knowledge without having to hard-code every rule or document location.

Have questions?

Find answers.

Any more questions?

How does V7 Go differ from tools like Zapier or Make?

Zapier and Make are useful when you want apps to react to events in each other. They’re built around triggers and simple data handoffs. V7 Go sits at a different layer. It focuses on document-heavy workflows where the outcome depends on what’s inside the file. Its agents can read a document, extract what matters, use information stored in your workspace, and then act inside your connected apps. In practice, it means Zapier or Make can still be part of your stack, but the purpose of each tool is different. For example, if Zapier handles the wiring, V7 Go can handles the logic that depends on the contents of the document.

How do I connect integrations to V7 Go?

V7 Go includes built-in connectors that link to a growing library of more than four hundred applications. These connectors work through triggers and skills. Triggers are events happening inside external apps that V7 Go can listen to, so when something changes in that app, an agent can start working. Skills are the actions V7 Go can take inside those external apps, whether that’s retrieving information, updating data, or using some feature of the app during a workflow.

Beyond the connector library, the platform can also link to any software that exposes an API endpoint. If an app supports HTTP requests, V7 Go can talk to it through webhooks or API calls. This is often the preferred method for teams working with industry-specific or niche tools that will never have an off-the-shelf integration. Setting these up usually only involves pointing V7 Go at the right endpoint and passing the credentials the system requires.

How does pricing work for integrations?

V7 Go includes built-in connectors that link to a growing library of more than four hundred applications. These connectors work through triggers and skills. Triggers are events happening inside external apps that V7 Go can listen to, so when something changes in that app, an agent can start working. Skills are the actions V7 Go can take inside those external apps, whether that’s retrieving information, updating data, or using some feature of the app during a workflow.

Beyond the connector library, the platform can also link to any software that exposes an API endpoint. If an app supports HTTP requests, V7 Go can talk to it through webhooks or API calls. This is often the preferred method for teams working with industry-specific or niche tools that will never have an off-the-shelf integration. Setting these up usually only involves pointing V7 Go at the right endpoint and passing the credentials the system requires.

What can V7 Go’s agents do once integrations are connected?

Once integrations are active, the agents can work end-to-end across documents and external systems. They can read files, extract structured information, and use additional context from the documents stored in your workspace. They can also perform actions inside the apps you’ve connected, whether that’s updating a record, retrieving additional data, sending a message, or running a task that depends on the contents of the document. You can design workflows where an incoming file automatically triggers an agent, the agent completes the work, and the results show up exactly where your team needs them.

What are Knowledge Hubs, and how do they relate to integrations?

Knowledge Hubs are where your documents live inside V7 Go. When you sync files from places like Google Drive or SharePoint, or upload them directly, they’re not just stored—they’re indexed. That indexing is important, because it means the AI can work with a large library of documents and decide, on its own, which ones are relevant to the task at hand. If an agent needs background information, a definition, a policy, a previous contract, or anything else buried in your files, it can pull the right pieces as it works. This gives your workflows the ability to reference your institutional knowledge without having to hard-code every rule or document location.

Ready to supercharge

your

Logo

Intercom

?

Analyse conversations automatically

V7 Go connects Intercom and Google Sheets with AI agents that classify and log every customer interaction for real-time analytics. Book a demo.

Ready to supercharge

your

Logo

Intercom

?

Analyse conversations automatically

V7 Go connects Intercom and Google Sheets with AI agents that classify and log every customer interaction for real-time analytics. Book a demo.

Ready to supercharge

your

Logo

Intercom

?

Analyse conversations automatically

V7 Go connects Intercom and Google Sheets with AI agents that classify and log every customer interaction for real-time analytics. Book a demo.

Ready to supercharge

your

Logo

Intercom

?

Analyse conversations automatically

V7 Go connects Intercom and Google Sheets with AI agents that classify and log every customer interaction for real-time analytics. Book a demo.