Square helps commerce marketers decide which purchases, customers, orders, and catalog items deserve follow-up before store activity gets separated from campaigns. With Square connected, Juno can review payment activity, surface customer context, track order details, and explore catalog data, then turn that evidence into store performance notes, audience follow-up, merchandising questions, and cleaner campaign reporting without sending every question back to the Square dashboard.
What Juno does with Square
Square gives Juno a practical Square MCP connector for commerce marketers who need store activity turned into follow-up decisions. Once connected, Juno can review payment activity, surface customer context, track order details, and explore catalog data, then turn that evidence into performance notes, audience follow-up, merchandising questions, and cleaner campaign reporting.
The useful part is the handoff from register reality to marketing reality. A promotion may look lively in an email report, but Square can show which purchases, customers, orders, and items actually moved. Juno brings that context into the brief, tracker, or draft pack you are already building.
Square's Orders API documentation explains how orders connect purchase items, totals, payments, fulfillment progress, and catalog data. That is exactly the kind of detail marketers need before they decide whether to retarget buyers, adjust a product story, or ask the team why a bestseller is quietly carrying the week.
Where it fits in your workflow
Connect Square before a campaign recap, product launch review, local event report, post-purchase follow-up, or merchandising check. The trigger is usually simple: the marketing team needs store evidence, but nobody wants another dashboard safari before the meeting.
A common workflow starts after a promo window closes. Juno can review payment activity, look at related orders, pull customer context where available, and explore the catalog items involved. The output might be a store performance note, an audience follow-up brief, a merchandising tracker, or a draft pack for customers who bought a specific item.
It also helps before the next campaign goes live. Square's Catalog API reference covers product and service catalog objects such as items, variations, categories, discounts, and modifiers. Juno can use that catalog context to spot product naming gaps, bundle questions, stale descriptions, or items that deserve sharper campaign copy.
What you get
- Square payment snapshots that show which purchases deserve a closer look before the campaign recap gets too tidy
- Customer context notes for follow-up lists, loyalty nudges, and audience questions grounded in actual store behavior
- Order detail trackers that connect purchases, items, totals, and fulfillment context to the next marketing decision
- Catalog and item checks that help marketers find merchandising gaps, naming issues, bundle ideas, and product copy questions
- Draft-ready briefs for store performance notes, campaign reporting, customer follow-up packs, and merchandising roadmaps
Frequently asked questions
Does Juno replace the Square dashboard?
No. Square remains the place to manage payments, orders, customers, catalog items, and store operations. Juno brings Square context into marketing work so reports, briefs, and follow-up plans start from fresher evidence.
What should I connect Square for first?
Start with a focused commerce question: which purchases followed a campaign, which customers need a follow-up, which orders explain a sales spike, or which catalog items need better marketing support.
Can Juno help with customer follow-up?
Yes, when the connected Square data includes the relevant customer, payment, and order context. Juno can shape that evidence into a follow-up list or message brief while keeping the final outreach decision with your team.
What inputs make the connector most useful?
Bring the campaign name, date range, location or store context, product names, order references, customer segment, and the output you want. Juno works best when it knows whether you need a quick note, a tracker, a brief, or a draft pack.
