Back to Tutorials

The Easiest Way to Build Your First Automation (n8n Tutorial)

Posted by alex@creahive Dec 27, 2025

The Ultimate Open-Source Automation Tool That Will Change Your Life

A companion guide to NetworkChuck’s video tutorial

 

Let’s be real: you’re spending way too much time on repetitive tasks. Copying data between apps. Manually checking feeds. Sending the same notifications over and over. What if I told you there’s a free, open-source tool that can automate all of it – and it’s so easy that the hardest part is deciding what to automate first?

That tool is n8n (pronounced “nodemation”), and after watching NetworkChuck’s tutorial, you’ll wonder how you ever lived without it.

Video Chapters – Quick Navigation

Jump directly to any section of the video:

Time Topic Link
0:00 Intro – What is n8n? Watch
2:05 Set up cloud account Watch
3:05 Activate n8n Watch
3:36 Setting up an automation Watch
6:42 Sending automation through nodes Watch
8:54 Configuring nodes Watch
10:14 Creating limit node Watch
10:40 Setting up command line node Watch
11:45 Setting up merge node Watch
14:00 Implementing AI Watch
17:58 Creating 2nd workflow Watch
19:22 Creating edit field node Watch
20:44 Adding YouTube channels Watch
22:34 Adding filter Watch
24:52 AI agents Watch

Why n8n Destroys Zapier and IFTTT

You’ve probably heard of Zapier or IFTTT. They’re fine tools, but here’s the problem: they get expensive fast, and your data flows through their servers. n8n flips that model on its head:

  • It’s completely free and open-source – no per-task pricing that balloons as you scale
  • Self-hosted option – your data never leaves your infrastructure
  • Visual workflow builder – drag, drop, connect, done
  • 400+ integrations – from Gmail to Slack to OpenAI to your custom APIs
  • AI-native – built-in support for LLMs, making intelligent automations a breeze

Key Concepts from the Tutorial

Nodes: The Building Blocks

Everything in n8n revolves around nodes. Think of them as individual steps in your automation. Each node does one thing – fetch data from an RSS feed, filter results, send a message to Slack, call an AI model. You connect them together to create powerful workflows.

Triggers: Starting Your Automation

Every workflow needs a starting point. Triggers can be scheduled (run every hour), webhook-based (respond to external events), or manual (you click a button). In the tutorial, NetworkChuck shows how to set up RSS triggers to pull content from Hacker News and Reddit automatically.

The Merge Node: Combining Data Streams

One of the most useful nodes covered is the Merge node. It lets you combine data from multiple sources – like pulling posts from both Reddit AND Hacker News, then processing them together. This is where automations really start to get powerful.

AI Integration: The Game Changer

Starting at 14:00 in the video, NetworkChuck demonstrates how to add AI to your workflows. This is where n8n really shines: you can have AI summarize articles, classify content, generate responses, or decide how data should flow. It’s like having an intelligent assistant built into your automation pipeline.

What You’ll Build in This Tutorial

By the end of the video, you’ll have created:

  1. An RSS aggregator that pulls the latest posts from Hacker News and Reddit
  2. Smart filtering to only surface the content you actually care about
  3. AI-powered summarization so you get the gist without reading every article
  4. A YouTube channel monitor that tracks new uploads from your favorite creators
  5. An introduction to AI agents – the next level of intelligent automation

Getting Started: Two Paths

Option 1: n8n Cloud (Fastest)

If you just want to start building right now, n8n offers a cloud-hosted version. No servers to manage, no Docker to install. Sign up at n8n.io and you can be building your first automation in minutes. The tutorial covers this starting at 2:05.

Option 2: Self-Hosted (Full Control)

Want complete ownership of your automation stack? Self-host n8n on your own server or VPS. NetworkChuck has a separate video for this: On-Prem Install Tutorial. You can use Docker and Cloudflare Tunnel to set up a secure, production-ready instance without exposing any ports.

Pro Tips from the Tutorial

  • Start simple. Don’t try to automate everything at once. Pick one annoying repetitive task and nail that first.
  • Use the Limit node. When testing, limit your results to just a few items so you’re not overwhelmed with data.
  • Test each node individually. Click “Test step” to see what data each node produces before connecting the next one.
  • The Edit Fields node is your friend. Use it to reshape and clean data between steps.
  • AI + Automation = Magic. Don’t sleep on the AI capabilities. Having an LLM make decisions in your workflow opens up possibilities that weren’t imaginable a few years ago.

Go Automate Everything

The best time to start automating was yesterday. The second best time is right now. n8n gives you the power to reclaim hours of your week – and it won’t cost you a dime.

As NetworkChuck says: “Grab your coffee, let’s automate EVERYTHING.”

Now go watch the video, build something cool, and never do that tedious task manually again.

Automation Power

🚀n8n is a free, open-source automation tool that can automate everything from news aggregation to home lab tasks, rivaling Zapier and IFTTT with its power and privacy.

🔌With connections to countless services and the ability to create custom integrations, n8n offers unparalleled versatility for automating a wide range of workflows.

Deployment and Setup

🏠n8n can be installed on-premises in a home lab or in the cloud on a VPS, with the cloud option being less complex and allowing for quick setup.

🐳Installation uses Docker, making it accessible even to Docker novices, with the video providing a step-by-step guide.

Features and Capabilities

🧠n8n supports AI-powered automations through integration with LLM chains like Llama, enabling advanced tasks such as automatic summarization.

🖥️The tool offers real-time monitoring and automation of network devices through SSH and command execution nodes, making it valuable for network administrators.

Comments

Leave a Comment