I have a webhook that updates a field, let's call it FIELD1 through XML response mapping. I understand that webhooks, are asynchronous, hence my question: If I use a trigger "Webhook is Called" in a smart campaign, can I be sure that the FIELD1 is updated before the first flow step is executed?
I looked at the product documentation and at developers.marketo.com, but could not find this detail. I read on the community about people using "Data Value Change" to trigger when there is an update caused by webhook, but I may also have other campaigns change this field and I do not want to create a separate field just for the purpose of Webhook response monitoring.
Hi Pavel,
No, you should use a "data value changes" trigger.
-Greg
And, to complete:
in the Data value changes trigger, you can use reason and source constraints.
Reason: Webhook Updated Lead : [webhookname]
Source: Webhook
-Greg
Hi Greg,
thanks, this is helpful. But what if I want to take action after the webhook is finished, even if the data did not change? This is a real request that I am solving, when a non-change of data through a webhook must also trigger an action. Do you have an experience dealing with such request?
Like I said over on the idea, you can use the WWC trigger to inspect the payload. Or send back a 204 No Data and check for that.
Hi Sanford, thanks for the suggestions. In my case, the response is SOAP XML that is not so easy to parse in a smart list and I am not in control of the called web service so I cannot change the return code. I think I can make it work with one or two extra data fields, but it is a kludge.
Can see how it would be frustrating if you don't control the endpoint.
Maybe we need to abstract this a bit. You want to be able to trigger if a value change is *requested* (call it a logical update) even if a change (physical update) is never made because it's a no-op. What about a checkbox for a new DVC constraint "Include updates to the same value"? This is something we can do in SQL triggers, for example.
Some reading if this was before you subbed to the blog: http://blog.teknkl.com/fun-with-the-webhook-is-called-trigger/