Skills Development Granola Webhooks and Event Automation

Granola Webhooks and Event Automation

v20260423
granola-webhooks-events
Build sophisticated, event-driven automations using Granola's data triggers via Zapier webhooks. This guide details the event model, payload structure, and advanced filtering patterns. Implement custom handlers in JavaScript or Python to process meeting data, route based on attendees, or automatically update external systems like CRMs and task managers.
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Overview

Granola Webhooks & Events

Overview

Granola does not expose raw webhook endpoints. All event-driven automation flows through Zapier, which provides two trigger events. This skill covers the event model, webhook payload structure, event filtering, processing patterns, and building custom event handlers.

Prerequisites

  • Granola Business plan (for Zapier access)
  • Zapier account (Free for basic Zaps, Paid for multi-step)
  • Optional: custom webhook endpoint (Express.js, FastAPI, or serverless function)

Instructions

Step 1 — Understand the Event Model

Granola fires events through Zapier triggers, not direct webhooks. Two triggers are available:

Trigger When It Fires Use Case
Note Added to Granola Folder A note is placed in a specific folder (automatic) Auto-route by meeting type
Note Shared to Zapier You manually click Share > Zapier on a note Selective sharing for important meetings

Step 2 — Webhook Payload Structure

When a Zapier trigger fires, Granola sends this data:

{
  "title": "Sprint Planning — Q1 Week 12",
  "creator_name": "Sarah Chen",
  "creator_email": "sarah@company.com",
  "attendees": [
    {"name": "Sarah Chen", "email": "sarah@company.com"},
    {"name": "Mike Johnson", "email": "mike@company.com"},
    {"name": "Alex Kim", "email": "alex@external.com"}
  ],
  "calendar_event_title": "Sprint Planning",
  "calendar_event_datetime": "2026-03-22T10:00:00Z",
  "note_content": "## Summary\nDiscussed Q1 priorities...\n\n## Action Items\n- [ ] @sarah: Schedule design review..."
}

Key fields for filtering and routing:

  • attendees[].email — detect internal vs. external meetings
  • calendar_event_title — match meeting type patterns
  • note_content — search for action items, decisions, keywords

Step 3 — Event Filtering Patterns

Use Zapier Filter steps to route events:

Filter: Only External Meetings

Filter: attendees.email DOES NOT contain "@company.com"
(at least one attendee has a non-company email)

Filter: Only Meetings with Action Items

Filter: note_content contains "- [ ]"

Filter: Only Sales Calls (by title keywords)

Filter: calendar_event_title contains any of: "discovery", "demo", "sales", "prospect"

Filter: Long Meetings Only (> 30 min)

Use Zapier Code step to parse calendar_event_datetime and compare to note timestamp

Step 4 — Build a Custom Webhook Handler

Forward Granola events from Zapier to your own endpoint:

# Zapier configuration
Trigger: Granola — Note Added to Folder ("All Meetings")
Action: Webhooks by Zapier — POST
  URL: https://your-api.com/webhooks/granola
  Payload Type: JSON
  Data:
    title: "{{title}}"
    creator: "{{creator_email}}"
    attendees: "{{attendees}}"
    content: "{{note_content}}"
    datetime: "{{calendar_event_datetime}}"
    hmac: "{{your_webhook_secret}}"

Express.js handler:

// webhook-handler.js
import express from 'express';
const app = express();
app.use(express.json());

app.post('/webhooks/granola', async (req, res) => {
  const { title, creator, attendees, content, datetime } = req.body;

  // Validate webhook (use HMAC or shared secret)
  // if (!verifyHmac(req)) return res.status(401).send('Unauthorized');

  console.log(`Meeting received: ${title} (${datetime})`);

  // Extract action items
  const actionItems = content
    .split('\n')
    .filter(line => line.match(/^- \[ \]/))
    .map(line => line.replace('- [ ] ', ''));

  // Route based on meeting type
  const isExternal = attendees.some(a => !a.email?.endsWith('@company.com'));

  if (isExternal) {
    await handleExternalMeeting({ title, attendees, content, actionItems });
  } else {
    await handleInternalMeeting({ title, content, actionItems });
  }

  res.status(200).json({ processed: true, actions: actionItems.length });
});

async function handleExternalMeeting({ title, attendees, content, actionItems }) {
  // CRM update, follow-up email draft, Slack #sales notification
  console.log(`External meeting: ${title}, ${actionItems.length} action items`);
}

async function handleInternalMeeting({ title, content, actionItems }) {
  // Linear tasks, Notion archive, Slack #team notification
  console.log(`Internal meeting: ${title}, ${actionItems.length} action items`);
}

app.listen(3000, () => console.log('Granola webhook handler running on :3000'));

Python FastAPI handler:

from fastapi import FastAPI, Request
import re

app = FastAPI()

@app.post("/webhooks/granola")
async def handle_granola_event(request: Request):
    data = await request.json()
    title = data.get("title", "Untitled")
    content = data.get("content", "")
    attendees = data.get("attendees", [])

    # Extract action items
    actions = re.findall(r"- \[ \] (.+)", content)

    # Route by attendee type
    external = [a for a in attendees if not a.get("email", "").endswith("@company.com")]

    if external:
        # Process external meeting
        await process_external(title, actions, external)
    else:
        await process_internal(title, actions)

    return {"processed": True, "action_count": len(actions)}

Step 5 — Processing Patterns

Pattern When to Use Implementation
Immediate Time-sensitive follow-ups Direct Zapier actions, ~2 min latency
Batch Reduce noise, aggregate Queue to SQS/Redis, process every 15 min
Conditional Route by meeting type Zapier Paths or custom webhook with routing logic
Idempotent Prevent duplicate processing Store processed note IDs, skip duplicates

Step 6 — Error Handling and Retry

Zapier handles retries automatically for failed actions. For custom webhooks:

// Implement idempotency
const processedNotes = new Set(); // Use Redis/DB in production

app.post('/webhooks/granola', async (req, res) => {
  const noteId = `${req.body.title}-${req.body.datetime}`;

  if (processedNotes.has(noteId)) {
    return res.status(200).json({ status: 'already_processed' });
  }

  processedNotes.add(noteId);
  // ... process the event
});

Output

  • Zapier triggers configured for target folders
  • Event filtering routing meetings by type
  • Custom webhook handler processing events
  • Idempotency preventing duplicate processing

Error Handling

Error Cause Fix
Trigger not firing Wrong folder name in Zapier Verify folder name matches exactly (case-sensitive)
Empty note_content Note still processing when trigger fires Add 2-minute Delay step before processing actions
Duplicate events Zapier retry on timeout Implement idempotency with note ID deduplication
Webhook timeout Handler takes > 30s Return 200 immediately, process async
Missing attendees Calendar event has no attendee list No fix — attendees come from calendar event data

Resources

Next Steps

Proceed to granola-performance-tuning for transcription quality optimization.

Info
Category Development
Name granola-webhooks-events
Version v20260423
Size 5.29KB
Updated At 2026-04-26
Language