You must define triggers to cause outbound events to be sent, and you might also want to define triggers to update metrics, stopwatches, or counters based on special conditions. To define a trigger, you specify its evaluation times and its trigger condition.
Triggering events include job loss, retirement, or death, and are typical for many types of contracts. These triggers help to prevent, or ensure, that in the case of a catastrophic change, the terms of an original contract may also change. Life insurance policies may include a triggering event based on the insured age.
Triggers will be helpful when we need to execute some events automatically on certain desirable scenarios. For example, we have a constantly changing table and need to know the occurrences of changes and when these changes happen.
A trigger event is any occurrence that creates an opening for a marketing or sales opportunity. Sales and marketing automation workflows use trigger events to enable small organizations to scale customer interactions.