Quotivity’s approvals were built to handle the real-world complexity of quoting—without forcing admins to maintain an overly complicated ruleset. You’ve always been able to create detailed approval logic in HubSpot + Quotivity while keeping the setup manageable.
But there was one pattern that could still be tricky to implement cleanly:
In a hierarchical model, only one approver should be required, based on the size or risk of the deal. For example:
The challenge is that multiple “Require Approval” rules can be true at the same time. Without extra guardrails, the system may evaluate multiple outcomes—and you end up with approvals that are duplicative, confusing, or routed to the wrong level.
We’ve added a new option to the Require Approval outcome: Apply first matching approval only
When checked, only the highest-priority Require Approval rule that evaluates to true is applied. After that, no additional approval outcomes are evaluated.
In plain terms: the quote triggers exactly one approval path—the right one.
This single checkbox makes hierarchical approvals straightforward because it lets you:
For admins, it means fewer edge cases and less time spent troubleshooting “why did this go to both people?”
For approvers and reps, it means fewer delays and less ambiguity.
Let’s say you define these approval rules (ordered by priority):
On a quote with a 27% discount, all three rules are technically true. But with Apply first matching approval only enabled on the Require Approval outcome, only rule #1 applies—and the request goes straight to the CFO.
No extra steps. No duplicate approvals. No confusion.
That’s it. You’ve created a clean hierarchical approval flow.
This option is ideal when:
If your process truly requires multiple approvals (e.g., Finance and Legal), you may choose not to enable it for those paths.
Approvals work best when they’re clear, consistent, and fast. This update makes hierarchical approvals easy to implement and easy to maintain—while ensuring every request routes to the right person the first time.