Taiga Trigger consultants

We can help you automate your business with Taiga Trigger and hundreds of other systems to improve efficiency and productivity. Get in touch if you’d like to discuss implementing Taiga Trigger.

Integration And Tools Consultants

Taiga Trigger

About Taiga Trigger

Taiga is an open-source project management platform for agile teams, and the Taiga Trigger node in n8n lets you build automation that reacts to events inside Taiga in real time. When a user story is created, a task status changes, or a sprint starts, the trigger fires and kicks off whatever downstream workflow you’ve configured.

This is particularly useful for development teams that use Taiga for scrum or kanban but need project updates to flow into other systems like Slack, email, or reporting dashboards without manual copying. The trigger-based approach means your integrations respond instantly rather than polling on a schedule.

Osher helps Australian development and product teams connect Taiga to the rest of their toolchain. If your team manages work in Taiga but still sends manual status updates or copies data into spreadsheets for stakeholder reporting, we can build automated workflows that handle it for you.

Taiga Trigger FAQs

Frequently Asked Questions

What events can the Taiga Trigger node react to?

How is the Taiga Trigger different from the regular Taiga node?

Can Taiga events send notifications to Slack or Microsoft Teams?

Is Taiga a good fit for non-software teams?

Can Taiga be self-hosted in Australia?

Can Taiga Trigger workflows update external dashboards automatically?

How it works

We work hand-in-hand with you to implement Taiga Trigger

Step 1

Review Your Taiga Project Structure

We look at how your team has Taiga configured, including projects, user story workflows, task statuses, and sprint structures. This helps us understand which events matter for your integrations and which can be ignored.

Step 2

Identify the Events That Need Automation

Working with your team, we decide which Taiga events should trigger downstream actions. For example, you might want notifications when blockers are flagged, dashboard updates when sprints close, or automatic task creation when new user stories are added.

Step 3

Configure Taiga Webhooks

We set up the webhook in your Taiga project that sends event data to n8n. The Taiga Trigger node in n8n receives these webhook payloads and makes the event data available for processing in the rest of the workflow.

Step 4

Build the Response Workflows

For each trigger event, we build the n8n workflow that processes it. This might involve sending a Slack message, updating a Google Sheet, creating a task in another tool, or sending an email. Each workflow includes conditional logic to handle different event types.

Step 5

Test with Real Project Events

We create, update, and close tasks and user stories in your Taiga project and verify that each trigger fires correctly and the downstream actions complete. We also test scenarios like rapid successive updates to make sure the workflows don’t duplicate.

Step 6

Deploy and Document

The workflows go live, and we provide documentation explaining which events are being watched, what each workflow does, and how to adjust the setup if your Taiga project structure or notification preferences change.

Transform your business with Taiga Trigger

Unlock hidden efficiencies, reduce errors, and position your business for scalable growth. Contact us to arrange a no-obligation Taiga Trigger consultation.