---
title: "How to Create an Autopilot Meeting Campaign in FirstSales | FirstSales"
description: "Launch an Autopilot campaign with the Meeting goal — the AI finds contacts and writes every email to book calls. Covers all seven builder tabs."
canonical: "https://firstsales.io/tutorial/create-autopilot-meeting-campaign/"
---

[Home](/)/[Tutorials](/tutorial/)/How to Create an Autopilot Meeting Campaign in FirstSales

Campaigns

# How to Create an Autopilot Meeting Campaign in FirstSales

Launch an Autopilot campaign with the Meeting goal — the AI finds contacts and writes every email to book calls. Covers all seven builder tabs.

9 min read·Beginner·7 steps

1. 1  
## Choose Outreach → Autopilot → Meeting  
Open **Campaigns** from the left nav and click **Create Campaign**. Step 1 sets the three choices that shape everything after it:  
   * **Campaign Type** — pick **Outreach** (direct sales & prospecting).  
   * **Campaign Mode** — pick **Autopilot**. This is the mode where the AI _finds the contacts and writes the emails_ for you. (The other mode, Template, is where you write your own emails — covered in a separate tutorial.)  
   * **Campaign Goal** — pick **Meeting**. This tells the AI the outcome is a _booked call_, so every email is written to drive toward "grab 15 minutes" rather than just starting a chat.  
Give it a name and click **Next**. One thing to know before you commit: **campaign mode cannot be changed after creation** — if you want AI sourcing, choose Autopilot here.  
![Choose Outreach → Autopilot → Meeting](/tutorials/autopilot-meeting-01-mode-goal.webp)
2. 2  
## Tell the AI who to target  
Step 2 is **Contact Search Criteria** — this only appears for Autopilot, because it's what the AI uses to go find people. Describe your ideal buyer in the **Target Audience** box in plain language, e.g. _"Founders and heads of sales at B2B SaaS companies (10–200 employees) in the United States."_  
   * **Industry** — narrow the search (e.g. _B2B SaaS_).  
   * **Geography** — optionally pin Country, State, and City.  
The more specific the audience line, the tighter the AI's list. Click **Create Campaign** and FirstSales builds the campaign and opens its builder.  
![Tell the AI who to target](/tutorials/autopilot-meeting-02-contact-criteria.webp)
3. 3  
## Meet the seven builder tabs  
Every campaign opens on a builder with seven tabs across the top. Here's what each one is for:  
   * **Info** — name, description, goal, and status of the campaign.  
   * **Settings** — the sending mailbox (connector), daily sending limits, and schedule.  
   * **AI Instructions** — where you teach the AI how to write for this campaign (next step).  
   * **Workflow** — the AI pipeline that runs the campaign, as a canvas or a numbered step list.  
   * **Analytics** — sent, opened, replied, and meetings booked over time.  
   * **Contacts** — the people the AI harvested, with their status in the sequence.  
   * **Logs** — a running record of every action the AI took, for debugging.  
You mostly live in **AI Instructions** and **Workflow** before launch, then **Analytics** and **Contacts** after.  
![Meet the seven builder tabs](/tutorials/autopilot-meeting-03-builder-tabs.webp)
4. 4  
## Teach the AI your voice  
Open **AI Instructions**. Whatever you write here is _appended to the AI's prompt_ for every email in this campaign — it's your single biggest lever on quality. Use it to set tone ("plain, no hype"), rules ("never more than 90 words"), and your offer in one line.  
**Style starters** let you heart the email _shapes_ that feel like you — different structures, not just different words. This never blocks launching, so skip it if you're in a hurry, but a couple of confirmed shapes noticeably sharpens the drafts.  
![Teach the AI your voice](/tutorials/autopilot-meeting-05-ai-instructions.webp)
5. 5  
## Review the autopilot workflow  
Open the **Workflow** tab and switch to **Steps** for a clean numbered view. This is the pipeline the AI runs on its own:  
   * **Contact Harvester** — finds and collects contacts matching your criteria.  
   * **Contact Segmentation** — filters and segments them.  
   * **Email Scheduler** — sets the follow-up cadence.  
   * **Email Drafter** — writes a personalized email per contact.  
   * **Content Approval** — a human-or-timeout gate before anything sends (Approved / Rejected branches).  
   * **Email Sender** — delivers approved emails.  
You don't have to build any of this — it's pre-wired for Autopilot. Use **Canvas** if you want to see the branches visually.  
![Review the autopilot workflow](/tutorials/autopilot-meeting-04-workflow-steps.webp)
6. 6  
## Approve the first emails, then set it live  
Before launching, open **Settings** and pick the **connector** (a warmed-up mailbox) the campaign sends from, and confirm the daily limit. Then set the campaign **Active**.  
Because of the **Content Approval** step, the first batch of AI-written emails waits for your yes. Review a few, approve, and the AI keeps drafting, approving on timeout, and sending from there — you only step in when you want to.
7. 7  
## Track meetings booked  
Once it's live, three tabs tell you how it's doing:  
   * **Analytics** — sent, opened, replied, and meetings booked.  
   * **Contacts** — every harvested person and where they are in the sequence.  
   * **Logs** — what the AI did and when, if you need to trace a decision.  
Since the goal is **Meeting**, watch replies and bookings, not just opens. If replies are thin, tighten **AI Instructions** and the audience line rather than sending more volume.

## Pro tips

Hard-won shortcuts that keep warm-up on track.

1

### The Meeting goal writes toward the ask

Choosing Meeting makes every email drive to a booked call, not just a conversation. Pick it only when a 15-minute meeting is the real win — otherwise the ask lands too early.

2

### Mode is permanent — choose deliberately

Campaign mode can't change after creation. Pick Autopilot when you want the AI to source and write; if you already have a list and copy, a Template campaign fits better.

3

### Spend your effort in AI Instructions

In Autopilot the AI handles sourcing and drafting, so your leverage is the instructions and the audience line — not chasing contacts. A tight one-line offer beats ten tweaks to the list.

4

### Keep Content Approval on for the first batch

Let the approval gate hold the first emails so you can sanity-check the AI's voice. Once a batch reads well, it approves on timeout and flows on its own.

## Frequently asked questions

What's the difference between Autopilot and Template mode?

**Autopilot** is a two-step setup where the AI _finds the contacts and writes the emails_ — you give it a target audience and it runs the whole pipeline. **Template** is a one-step setup where _you_ write your own email templates and bring your own contacts. You choose the mode at creation and it can't be changed afterward.

What's the difference between the Meeting and Get Reply goal?

**Meeting** writes every email toward booking a call — the call-to-action is "grab 15 minutes." **Get Reply** optimizes for starting a conversation, so the CTA is softer (a question, not a calendar link). Same machinery, different intent; pick Meeting when a booked call is the actual goal.

Can I change the campaign mode after creating it?

No. The builder shows **"Campaign mode cannot be changed after creation."** If you picked the wrong mode, create a new campaign with the right one — it only takes a minute.

Where do the contacts come from in an Autopilot campaign?

From the **Contact Harvester** step in the workflow. It reads your **Target Audience**, Industry, and Geography from the Contact Search Criteria and finds matching people automatically — you don't upload a list. You can see everyone it collected on the **Contacts** tab.

Do I have to write any of the emails myself?

No. The **Email Drafter** writes a personalized email for each contact. Your job is to steer it in **AI Instructions** — tone, length, and your one-line offer — and to approve the first batch. If you'd rather write the copy yourself, use a **Template** campaign instead.

What is the Content Approval step?

It's a gate in the workflow that holds AI-written emails for a human yes/no before they send, with **Approved** and **Rejected** branches. It approves on timeout if you don't act, so it protects the first sends without blocking the campaign long-term.

Which mailbox does the campaign send from?

Whichever **connector** you select on the **Settings** tab. Use a mailbox you've already warmed up so your first real sends land in the inbox — see the email warm-up tutorial for that setup.

How do I know the campaign is booking meetings?

Check the **Analytics** tab for replies and meetings booked, and the **Contacts** tab to see who's moved through the sequence. Because the goal is Meeting, judge it on replies and bookings rather than open rate.

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