
Overviews
How it works?
Create issues from support tickets
Transform customer-reported bugs and feature requests from support systems into GitLab issues with appropriate labels, assignees, and priority levels, ensuring customer feedback reaches development teams.
Trigger pipelines from external events
Initiate GitLab CI/CD pipelines when events occur in connected systems such as deployments approved, testing environments ready, or scheduled maintenance windows, coordinating releases with business operations.
Update project boards from commits
Sync code commit information to project management platforms, moving tasks through workflow stages when specific branches are updated or merge requests are created, maintaining alignment between code and planning.
Send merge request notifications
Alert relevant team members through messaging platforms when merge requests are opened, reviewed, or merged, ensuring code review processes proceed efficiently without constant platform checking.
Generate release notes from milestones
Compile GitLab milestone information, closed issues, and merged requests into formatted release documentation that stakeholders can review, creating transparency around version changes and improvements.
Archive repository data to analytics
Extract commit histories, contributor statistics, and project metrics from GitLab repositories to business intelligence platforms for development velocity tracking and resource allocation decisions.
Assign reviewers based on file changes
Automatically add appropriate code reviewers to merge requests by analyzing which files were modified, routing frontend changes to UI specialists and backend updates to architecture experts.
Sync labels across projects
Maintain consistent issue and merge request labeling across multiple GitLab projects by replicating label changes, ensuring standardized categorization and reporting throughout your organization.

Configure
Build
Customer feedback to development pipeline
Build a complete feedback loop that captures customer requests from multiple channels, creates prioritized GitLab issues, tracks development progress, notifies customers when features ship, and measures satisfaction with implemented solutions.
“You can’t do this anywhere else.”



















































Your stack,
connected.

