What's considered a Ticket?
Last updated: May 7, 2026
All communication with customers are considered Issues.
Important: Pylon automatically ingests all messages in connected channels and creates Issues by default, regardless of your ticketing settings. Disabling ticketing only prevents customers from creating formal Tickets through integrations - it does not stop Issue creation entirely.
Issues have further classifications of either being a:
Conversation
Ticket
Issue Type | Examples |
Conversation | Any conversational interactions with the customer where the customer is not aware their messages are being tracked, ie. Pylon is invisible to the customer. This happens in shared Slack or Microsoft Teams channels. Here, Pylon is invisible to your customer and messages are collected and bundled into conversations. Note: All messages in connected channels create Issues as Conversations by default, even when ticketing is disabled. Common examples include brief responses like "thanks!" or casual channel discussions. Additionally, AI bots may not respond to messages when operating in conversation mode, as they typically require ticket mode to function properly. |
Ticket | Interactions with the customer where they are aware they are opening tickets. Typically in these cases, the customer see their ticket number, or is asked for more information to fill out.
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Managing Unwanted Conversation Issues
If you want to automatically handle conversation-type Issues (like brief "thanks!" messages), you can set up a trigger to auto-close them:
Go to Settings > Triggers
Create a new trigger with these conditions:
When: New Issue Created
If: Issue Type is Not Ticket
Then: Set Issue Status to Closed
This will automatically close all Issues that are Conversations while keeping formal Tickets open for handling.