Do you use an email outreach platform like Klaviyo to engage your customers? Then you're already halfway there when it comes to giving your audience a personalized customer experience.
But if you want to tap into Klaviyo's full marketing potential, you should think about combining it with Zapier. With just a few Zaps—our word for automated workflows—you can effectively segment customer lists, bring in new subscribers, and track performance automatically. Here's how.
New to Zapier? It's workflow automation software that lets you focus on what matters. Combine user interfaces, data tables, and logic with thousands of apps to build and automate anything you can imagine. Sign up for free to use this app, and thousands more, with Zapier.
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To get started with a Zap template—what we call our pre-made workflows—just click on the button. It only takes a few minutes to set up. You can read more about setting up Zaps here.
Add leads and subscribers to Klaviyo from forms
Establishing a seamless data flow from your lead-capture forms to Klaviyo is essential for nurturing relationships with your audience and bolstering engagement. With automation, you can cut out the manual chore of transferring contact information, efficiently populating your Klaviyo subscriber list while giving yourself back time to focus on planning impactful email campaigns.
Whether a visitor fills out a contact form on your Squarespace site or submits a form on Webflow, these workflows ensure your lead-capture form seamlessly connects with Klaviyo.
Create Klaviyo subscribers from new Squarespace form submissions
Add Klaviyo subscribers for new form submissions in Webflow
Add Klaviyo subscribers for new submissions in Jotform
Add Klaviyo subscribers from ads
Depending on your business, you're likely using advertising tools to generate leads from highly targeted audiences on platforms like Google and Facebook.
If you do, sending these leads to Klaviyo is simply a matter of deciding how you want the leads to flow. For example, Facebook Lead Ads can collect lead information within the platform, meaning customers sign up for your campaign without leaving Facebook. You don't even need a web presence here. Then, use a Zap to send new Facebook leads to Klaviyo, and you have a fully automated email marketing machine ready to rock.
Other platforms can be just as powerful. TikTok Lead Generation is making waves as an ideal workflow to turn a TikTok audience into an off-platform marketing list. Leadpages is a landing page designer and workflow machine ecosystem unto itself. So you'll have a few options here. But no matter your pick, it's the same destination: add that new lead as a subscriber in Klaviyo and start working that email marketing magic.
Add Klaviyo subscribers from new ClickFunnels Classic contact activities
Add Klaviyo subscribers for new Facebook Lead Ads leads
Add Klaviyo subscribers for new TikTok Lead Generation leads
Segment your leads and customers automatically
Whether a new customer makes a purchase (hurrah!) or someone signs up for an event you're hosting, you'll want to continue nurturing them afterward. However, not everyone will be a fit for the same campaign. For example, you might want to send welcome messages to new customers or target a subset of customers who've purchased a product above a certain price.
With these simple Zaps, you can automatically create specific lists in Klaviyo whenever a specific purchase is made in another app. Or you can tag certain customers or add others to a segment in Klaviyo. That way, you can target different audiences and deliver personalized messages that resonate with each group's unique needs and behaviors.
Create lists in Klaviyo from new Eventbrite attendees
Add tags to Klaviyo lists from new Mailchimp subscribers
Connect Klaviyo with Google Sheets
Google Sheets is something of a circuit breaker for software automation. You can record new subscribers from Klaviyo into Google Sheets to keep tabs on every email you collect, true. But Google Sheets isn't a dead end. Work new spreadsheet rows into sheets, and you can more easily send it to other apps. For instance, maybe a new Google Sheet row becomes a new task for a team member within Trello.
Once you've recorded subscribers into Google Sheets, you have a separate list you can organize, funnel, and automate. You can use this list to categorize customers by specific triggers, turning a massive audience into a list of customer segments. This helps you write specifically crafted emails to each segment, enhancing personalization. Or you can simply keep tabs on your new emails within a separate app and never worry that you need a backup.
The process also works in reverse—use new rows in Google Sheets to automatically add Klaviyo subscribers. Use these Zaps to automatically import over a previously-existing email list from other applications.
Add new Klaviyo subscribers from a Google Sheets spreadsheet
Add subscribers to Klaviyo from new rows on Google Sheets
Create Klaviyo events for new or updated Google Sheets rows
Use webhooks with Klaviyo
Maybe you aren't finding the app you want on this list, but you're 100% certain you want Klaviyo's automation working for you. Although Zapier connects with thousands of apps, there may be an app you need that doesn't have a Zapier integration just yet. Fortunately, you can use Webhooks by Zapier to set up automation where you can't find it.
With webhooks, you can easily send information to and from Klaviyo from almost any app. Use one of these Zaps to get started:
Turn Klaviyo into your "everything" email marketing software
Are you ready to supercharge Klaviyo? Use the Zaps here to supplement your Klaviyo list, import old emails into your new system, or generate leads while you sleep via webforms, online ads, and landing pages. If everything goes according to plan, you may start making sales without noticing.
And this is just the start of what you can do with Klaviyo and Zapier. What will you automate first?
This article was originally published in January 2022 by Ana Gotter, with previous updates by Daniel Kenitz. It was most recently updated in August 2024 by Elena Alston.