Gaotus is built to operate inside real stacks. If your system exposes actions through APIs, plugins, webhooks, or structured data — Gaotus can execute workflows inside it with safeguards and confirmations.
The goal is not “connect everything”. The goal is to connect what matters for execution.
Gaotus integrations are designed around execution reliability: stable inputs, validated parameters, controlled actions, and confirmations.
Execute actions via endpoints with secure keys and strict schemas.
Trigger workflows from events: new order, status change, new lead.
Integrate directly into platforms like WordPress for native execution.
Most successful setups start simple: one workflow, one proof output, then expand. Gaotus supports patterns that stay predictable under growth.
Webhook triggers a single validated workflow.
Conversation becomes a schema-ready request.
Multi-system flow with confirmation after each call.
Some clients start with a single system (like WordPress). Others run multi-system operations with CRM, payments, inventory, and support tools. Gaotus supports both — with a scaling path that stays safe.
One system + one workflow + confirmation output.
Multi-system chain: validate → create → update → notify → log.
Compatibility is not just “can we connect?” — it”s “can we execute safely?” Gaotus treats every integration as an execution surface: inputs are validated, permissions are enforced, and actions must return confirmation outputs that can be logged and reviewed.
Gaotus integrates with business systems through APIs, webhooks, and platform plugins. It executes workflows with validated parameters, secure tokens, optional approvals, confirmation outputs, and audit logs for reliable automation.
Questions about integrations.
No. WordPress is common, but Gaotus integrates with any system that exposes actions through APIs, webhooks, or structured interfaces.
Gaotus uses secure keys/tokens, least-privilege access, validation, and audit logs to protect execution.
Yes. It can execute multi-step workflows across systems, with confirmation after each step.
We can often integrate via plugins, database interfaces, or structured export/import flows depending on the platform.
It depends on complexity. A single workflow with a known system can be fast, while multi-system enterprise setups take longer.