What Tags Are For
Tags are free-form labels you define that let you categorize contacts any way you want — and they connect directly to smart lists and automation triggers.
- Tags are flexible labels you define — Examples: "Hot Lead", "Past Client", "Referral", "Buyer", "Seller", "VIP", "Do Not Contact." You create any tag that makes sense for your business.
- Tags power smart lists — Any smart list can filter by tag. "Show me all contacts tagged Buyer AND New Lead" is a one-click view once you have your tags in place.
- Tags are automation triggers — In Jtek's automation workflows, you can trigger a workflow when a tag is added. Example: Tag Added = "Hot Lead" → send SMS sequence → notify assigned team member.
- A contact can have multiple tags — A contact can be tagged "Buyer", "Referral", and "Hot Lead" simultaneously. Tags are additive, not exclusive.
- Tags are visible across your whole team — Everyone on your Jtek account sees the same tags. This makes them useful for handoffs and shared pipeline management.
Adding a Tag to a Contact
You can add tags directly from the contact record in seconds — either by selecting an existing tag from the dropdown or typing a new one.
- Open the contact record — Click any contact's name to open their full record.
- Find the Tags field at the top of the record — It's typically in the contact overview panel on the left side or at the top of the Overview tab.
- Click inside the Tags field — A text input with a dropdown appears.
- Type a tag name to search existing tags — Matching tags from your account will appear in the dropdown. Select one to add it.
- Press Enter or click a suggestion to add the tag — The tag appears as a chip on the contact record immediately. If you typed a new tag name and pressed Enter, that tag is created account-wide and available for all contacts going forward.
Bulk Tagging
Add the same tag to many contacts at once from the contact list view — far faster than opening each record individually.
- Go to Contacts and filter or open a smart list — Identify the contacts you want to tag. Use search or a smart list to narrow down to the right group.
- Check the boxes next to the contacts you want to tag — Or check the header checkbox to select all visible contacts.
- Click "Actions" in the toolbar that appears — A bulk actions dropdown will appear above the contact list.
- Select "Add Tag" — A small modal will open with a tag input field.
- Type the tag name and click Apply — The tag is added to all selected contacts. The activity log on each contact will show that the tag was added.
Removing a Tag
Tags can be removed from individual contacts or in bulk just as easily as they were added.
- To remove a tag from one contact — Open the contact record → click the X icon next to the tag chip you want to remove. The tag is removed immediately and logged in the activity feed.
- To remove a tag from multiple contacts — Select the contacts in the list view → Actions → Remove Tag → type the tag name → Apply.
- Removing a tag does not delete the tag itself — The tag still exists in your account and can be added to other contacts. Removing it from a contact simply un-labels that contact.
- Removing a tag may affect automation triggers — If you have a workflow triggered by "Tag Removed," removing a tag will fire that workflow. Check your automations before bulk-removing tags.
- To delete a tag from your account entirely — Go to Settings → Tags to manage your master tag list. Deleting a tag from Settings removes it from all contacts simultaneously.
Tag Naming Best Practices
Inconsistent tag naming is one of the fastest ways to create a messy CRM. A little upfront discipline saves hours of cleanup later.
- Pick one casing convention and stick to it — Either use Title Case ("Hot Lead", "Past Client") or all lowercase ("hot-lead", "past-client") — never both. Title Case is easiest to read in the UI.
- Avoid spaces if tags will be used in automations — Some automation integrations work better with hyphenated tags ("hot-lead") than tags with spaces ("Hot Lead"). Check your workflow triggers before deciding.
- Keep tags short and obvious — "buyer" beats "residential-home-buyer-active". Short tags are readable in the tag chip view without truncating.
- Create a short internal tag glossary — Document 15–20 approved tags with definitions in a shared note or doc. Share it with your team so everyone adds the same tags consistently.
- Audit your tag list quarterly — Go to Settings → Tags and look for tags with zero contacts, duplicate meanings, or typos. Merge or delete them. A clean tag list makes smart lists and automations far more reliable.