What I've done here is I built a hiring pipeline that you can very easily slot into any sort of recruitment or HR workflow. On the lefth hand side here, we have the names of the applicants. I'll show you guys how people get into the system in a second. Then, we have the date that their records were updated. From there, we have the status, and I'll show you guys a number of statuses in a moment. a portfolio, email address, a source because you can hire from multiple different places, the role that you're hiring for. You know, if you're a tech recruiter, then obviously these are probably going to be techreated. If you're a services recruiter, they're probably going to be services related. The location, and then finally, a rating. Now, the way that this pipeline works is this is just an organizational tool that allows you to keep on top of all the people that are coming into the recruiting flow. And so, what we're doing is we're separating them into a number of statuses. What I've done is I've built up a pipeline that's composed of a new applicant status for people that just fill out a form, which I'll show you in a second, a reviewed status, a request, trial, review trial, onboarding, hired, not a fit, and then complete statuses as well. The way that this works in a nutshell is there's a form that you fill out. Now, I'm using an example from literally my own company. So, this is what I get people to fill out when they want to work with me. That includes an application. What you do is you select the role you're applying for. You learn a little bit about the person that you are doing the work for. You enter in a bunch of contact details. You link to your best work. So, usually that's some sort of portfolio, Google Drive, website, whatnot. You then have some specific questions about your availability. You then put in questions related to where you're based. You then do some textual based questions where you answer questions about your experience. And then I also like getting people, and this is just something that I do for my own business. You don't have to sell this to recruiters. I like getting people to think a little bit outside the box and give me a specific idea or improvement that they would implement in my business. Now what happens when I click submit is this then fires a watch responses type for module which gets that event. I then sleep a little bit and then I list those responses. This is just a design pattern in make. com. It makes it a lot easier to test flows. You don't technically need either of these steps but I like to have them. Then there's some custom logic that allows us to select roles. Then finally what we do is we actually create the task inside of ClickUp. So now if I go back to my hiring pipeline you'll see that I've now been added as an entry. Okay, including my email address, my portfolio, and a bunch of other relevant info. Now, the reason why recruiters love this sort of stuff is because you're automating a big chunk of most of their work. For instance, if I were to have a second automation now that monitored this pipeline, what I could do is I could set up rules where when I move their status from new applic, I automatically trigger an automation that then gets the project information and then sends it over via email to the prospect. So, now you have some sort of two-way communication going on. Then, for instance, I might send them an email saying, "Hey, we really liked your portfolio, and I'd love to have you put together a paid trial for us. Here's a link to a form which explains the trial, gives you the brief, and tells you how to upload the finished product. " So, a lot of recruiters now have multi-step flows where it's not just an interview. You'll actually ask them to do something for you. So, in this case, I'm just giving you guys a simple example with a video editor trial, but I'm sure you guys can imagine you guys could build out any sort of trial logic whatsoever with the tools that I'm giving you. So, first, we track your time using Clockify. Your task is to do a 15 to 30 second clip. Here is a bunch of information about the specific task. And now all you do is you just upload the link before export. Recruiters love this sort of stuff again because you were just automating actions based off of a pipeline. All we did was you just change the status from new applicant to request trial. Then it actually went and sent an email to our person with a link to another form that they can fill out. Well, as I'm sure you can imagine, what you could do is you could hook up logic so that when that other form is filled out, they move to another stage of the pipeline and so on and so forth. This next system is built in NAND and what it does is automate the