Most companies don’t decide to build complicated approval workflows. It just happens.
A pricing exception shows up, so you add an “if/then.” Then Finance needs to weigh in for certain terms, so you add another branch. Then regional leadership wants visibility, then Legal needs a path for non-standard language… and suddenly your HubSpot workflow has dozens of conditions, nested logic, and brittle edge cases.
Approval Queues were one of Quotivity’s earliest features—and they’re still one of the most effective ways to keep approvals both powerful and simple.
A common pattern we see with prospects is Sales Ops trying to route approvals using workflow logic like:
This approach “works,” but it has drawbacks:
Approval Queues shift the routing logic out of the workflow and into the approval configuration itself.
When an admin sets up a Require Approval outcome in Quotivity, they can specify which Approval Queue should handle the request.
Then, in HubSpot, your workflow doesn’t need to replicate the entire decision tree.
Instead, the workflow only needs to do two things:
That’s it.
Of course, you'll have more than one of these: one for each approval queue. but the beautiful thing is, all of the rules are managed in one, clearly documented, place: Quotivity.
With Approval Queues, you avoid the “workflow as rules engine” trap.
Instead of a single workflow that tries to encode every routing nuance, you get:
In many cases, it turns an approval workflow from “a maze of if/else logic” into something that’s readable at a glance.
Imagine you have approvals across:
Without queues, admins often build one monolithic workflow with a branch for each combination.
With Approval Queues, you define queues like:
Then configure your approval rules so that the Require Approval outcome sets the appropriate queue based on your policy.
Now your HubSpot workflow is no longer a complex routing machine—it’s just the trigger mechanism.
Approval Queues aren’t just about neat workflows. They also enable:
Approvals land with the right group (or process) by design, not by fragile workflow logic.
Need to change who handles Net 60 requests? Update the queue or rule—don’t refactor a workflow.
As you add teams, regions, products, or pricing models, you add or adjust queues instead of adding another dozen branches.
When routing is standardized, reps and approvers know what to expect—and approvals move faster.
Approval Queues are one of those foundational capabilities that quietly make everything else better.
They let administrators implement complex approval processes without building complex workflows. And that’s the real win: routing stays flexible, while workflows stay streamlined.
If your approvals have started to feel “too complex to touch,” Approval Queues are usually the fastest path back to clarity.