Per-pair page

Connect GitBook to Gmail in two minutes.

Real-time triggers from GitBook, ready-made actions in Gmail. Filter, transform, and route without writing a line of code.

Trigger app
GitBook as the trigger

Workflows fire when something happens in GitBook.

  • GitBook has no triggers yet. Use the catalog's universal Webhook trigger as the upstream.
Action app
Gmail as the action

Workflows do something in Gmail, instantly.

See all 27 actions →
Connect GitBook to Gmail — start free
Both directions

Pick the way that fits your stack.

Pair pages are mirrored. Each direction gets its own dedicated page.

GitBookGmail

When something happens in GitBook, do it in Gmail.

0 GitBook triggers wired to 27 Gmail actions.

    GmailGitBook

    Or fire it the other way around.

    1 Gmail triggers wired to 3 GitBook actions downstream.

    See GmailGitBook
    Popular pairings

    Common GitBook → Gmail workflows.

    Pick a pairing to set it up in two minutes. Each one is a fully editable recipe.

    Showing 0 of 0 combinations
    How it works

    Connect GitBook and Gmail in five steps.

    No code, no glue, no half-day setup. Each step is one click.

    1. 1
      Connect
      Authorize GitBook and Gmail

      Open TinyCommand, authorize GitBook and Gmail once each. Both connections are available to every workflow on your account.

    2. 2
      Trigger
      Pick a GitBook trigger

      Drop the GitBook → New event trigger onto the canvas. TinyCommand auto-registers the webhook.

      POST /v1/webhooks/gitbook.event
    3. 3
      Transform
      Add a filter or AI step

      Optionally add a Filter node ("subject contains URGENT") or an AI step ("classify intent") between trigger and action.

    4. 4
      Action
      Add the Gmail action

      Drop the Gmail → Add Labels to Message action below it. Map fields from the GitBook payload into the Gmail inputs.

      google-gmail.add-labels
    5. 5
      Publish
      Publish and forget

      Hit Publish. TinyCommand runs it in production from second one. Watch the run-log fill up.

    FAQ

    Questions about GitBook + Gmail.

    How long does it take to connect GitBook and Gmail on TinyCommand?
    Under two minutes. Authorize GitBook and Gmail once each, drop the GitBook trigger and Gmail action onto a workflow canvas, map a couple of fields, and publish. No code, no glue.
    Is the GitBook ↔ Gmail integration real-time?
    Yes. Both GitBook and Gmail expose webhooks, so events from one fire workflows in the other within seconds rather than on a polling interval.
    Can I filter or transform data between GitBook and Gmail?
    Yes. Add a Filter node to only pass through matching events, a Switch node to branch by value, or an AI / Code node to transform payloads before they hit Gmail.
    What GitBook events can trigger a Gmail workflow?
    Use TinyCommand's universal Webhook trigger to receive GitBook events, then run any of the 27 Gmail actions downstream.
    Do I need a paid plan to use GitBook with Gmail?
    No. There's a free tier that covers most GitBook+Gmail use cases without a credit card. Paid plans unlock higher run volumes and team features when you outgrow it.
    What if I want Gmail → GitBook instead?
    Build it the same way, in reverse. There's a dedicated /integrations/google-gmail/with/gitbook page with the reverse-direction triggers and actions.
    Related

    Other apps that pair well with GitBook.

    +
    GitBook + Slack
    Communication
    +
    GitBook + Google Sheets
    Spreadsheets & Databases
    +
    GitBook + HubSpot
    CRM & Sales
    +
    GitBook + Stripe
    Payments
    +
    GitBook + Notion
    Productivity
    +
    GitBook + Airtable
    Spreadsheets & Databases

    Connect GitBook to Gmail — start free