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Based on these social mentions, Zapier is viewed as a powerful automation platform that users frequently integrate with AI tools like Claude. Users appreciate its extensive integration capabilities (supporting "hundreds of integrations") and its role in connecting various productivity tools, though some face limitations with specific platforms like Facebook Marketplace personal accounts. There's growing interest in open-source alternatives like Activepieces that offer similar AI workflow capabilities, suggesting some users may find Zapier's pricing or features restrictive. Overall, Zapier maintains a strong reputation as a go-to automation solution, particularly for AI-powered workflows and business process automation.
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Based on these social mentions, Zapier is viewed as a powerful automation platform that users frequently integrate with AI tools like Claude. Users appreciate its extensive integration capabilities (supporting "hundreds of integrations") and its role in connecting various productivity tools, though some face limitations with specific platforms like Facebook Marketplace personal accounts. There's growing interest in open-source alternatives like Activepieces that offer similar AI workflow capabilities, suggesting some users may find Zapier's pricing or features restrictive. Overall, Zapier maintains a strong reputation as a go-to automation solution, particularly for AI-powered workflows and business process automation.
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Pricing found: $1, $1, $500,000, $150, $150
I built an open-source tool that reverse-engineers automation flows from screenshots
I kept screenshotting ManyChat flows from other creators… then spending 20 minutes trying to figure out how to actually rebuild them. So I built a Claude Code toolkit that does it for me. You screenshot any automation (ManyChat flow builder, DM conversations, GHL workflows, n8n, Make), and it outputs: strategy breakdown flow map step-by-step build instructions all message copy backend checklist (tags, fields, logic) It uses Claude’s native vision to read the screenshots — no OCR or third-party APIs. Just multimodal analysis + 8 reference files that map UI elements across platforms. Core skills: /flow-capture → screenshot in, rebuild guide out /flow-adapt → rewrite any flow for your business /flow-audit → 10-point diagnostic /flow-templates → 8 pre-built flow types plus: /flow-library, /flow-batch, /flow-export, /flow-setup Everything saves to Airtable so your flow library compounds over time. It’s free, MIT license. Only needs Claude Code + a free Airtable account. GitHub: github.com/seancrowe01/flow-heist Would love feedback — especially if anyone tries it on non-ManyChat platforms. (I’ve tested ManyChat the most so far, but the reference files also cover GHL, n8n, Make, and Zapier.) submitted by /u/One-Tradition-863 [link] [comments]
View originalHow are people using Claude as a personal assistant (Slack + Outlook + To-Do)? ADHD-friendly setup help 🙏
Hey all, looking for some practical advice / setups from people who’ve actually made this work. Context: I have pretty severe ADHD, so I’m trying to externalise my brain as much as possible I already use Claude (Pro) and ChatGPT (Plus) Claude is connected to Slack, which is great We’re a small company using Microsoft 365 (Outlook, calendar, etc.) What I want to achieve is basically a proper AI personal assistant layer: Core goals: A central to-do list inside Claude that: I can update naturally (“add this”, “remind me”, etc.) It remembers persistently (not just per chat) A daily briefing, e.g.: Unread / unreplied Slack messages (especially ones I’m tagged in) Important Outlook emails I haven’t replied to Today’s calendar + anything I should prep for Things I’ve likely missed Ideally: Claude nudges me on follow-ups Highlights risks (e.g. “you ignored this client for 3 days”) Acts like a second brain rather than just a chatbot Constraints / reality: I only have individual Claude Pro, not Claude Teams I can get admin access to M365, but unlikely to get approval for multiple paid seats Slack integration works, but Outlook / calendar is the missing piece I’m open to tools like Zapier / Make / etc. but want something maintainable Questions: Has anyone actually got Claude working with Outlook + calendar + tasks in a useful way? Is Claude Teams the only real way to unlock M365 integration, or are there workarounds? Should I be using something like Zapier as the “glue” layer? How are people handling persistent memory / to-do lists with Claude? Is this a case where I should flip it and use ChatGPT as the “brain” instead? I’m basically trying to build a reliable ADHD-friendly operating system for work using AI. If you’ve got a real setup (even scrappy), would massively appreciate you sharing 🙏 submitted by /u/zencatface [link] [comments]
View originalFacebook marketplace and IA
I am looking for a way to connect claude to facebook to answer messenger reply to my marketplace ads but i cant find a way. Zapier only work for business page but theses pages doesnt allow to create a facebook marketplace post. Any ways to do it? submitted by /u/Zackyrambo [link] [comments]
View originalWorkarounds for Using Google Tasks with Cowork
Hello all. I am trying to figure out a way to get Google Tasks to work better with Cowork. My company works exclusively in Google Workspace, and I find the native integrations of Google Tasks in my Gmail to be simple and convenient. However, when I try to ask Cowork to read my to-do lists in Tasks, it just can't do it (despite it working well with Docs, Sheets, Slides, etc.). I've tried to use Zapier to transfer my Tasks to-do list to either a Google Doc or a Google Sheet, but I've not been able to perfect that yet (consider that a lack of skill, not an indication that it wouldn't work). So, do any of you have any suggestions on a workaround to help me to get Cowork to see my to-do lists in Tasks? If so, could you share them with me in a way that aligns with the skill level indicated by my struggles with Zapier? If not, any suggestions on a to-do app that plays nicely with both Cowork and Gmail? I tried Todoist, but the extension just wouldn't work on Chrome. Any suggestions/help would be much appreciated. submitted by /u/Natural_Place_4717 [link] [comments]
View originalAre scheduled tasks and connectors now available in Claude CLI?
I’ve been trying to find a way to automatically schedule tasks in Claude the way you can in ChatGPT. ive used zapier and make.com to schedule, but it doesn’t have access to the native connectors, and doesn’t have persistent threads. i just read about this new /loop feature that supposedly allows for task scheduling, but can I use connectors as well? So for example, I want it to clean up my gmail every morning (filter spam, read important emails, draft responses) and provide me with a morning brief of key emails. is that possible? submitted by /u/Galactic-Dicklips [link] [comments]
View originalIs Claude Code worth learning for a small business owner, or is the web app enough?
I own and operate a small catering business — It is just me and my wife right now, but I'm building for growth. I've been focused on automating and systematizing as much as possible. I use a solid CRM that handles a lot of that, and I have that connected to Zapier for automated communications (initial texts, emails, etc.). Currently I use Claude mainly for SEO and CRO on my website. The only tool I've thought about having it build is an inventory calculator/database — though honestly, Excel or Sheets could probably handle that. My questions: Is it worth learning Claude Code, or is the web version sufficient for my use case? What are some key ways I might be missing to use Claude in a small service business? submitted by /u/Abu_The_Rouge_Monkey [link] [comments]
View originalI’m saving 10+ hours a week with Claude, but I stopped "prompting" months ago.
Founders keep trying to automate their lives with complex AI stacks, and I keep seeing the same thing happen: They end up with 15 tabs open, copy-pasting prompts, and duct-taping everything together with Zapier workflows that quietly break every week. It looks productive, but they’re spending more time managing the AI than running the business. The real leverage isn't about adding more tools or "better" prompts. It’s about Context Architecture. The biggest shift for me was moving my SOPs, meeting notes, and CRM into one centralized "Source of Truth" (I use Notion) and plugging Claude directly into that context. When Claude isn't "guessing" what your business does, the hallucinations disappear and the utility sky-rockets. Here are the 3 specific use cases that saved me 10+ hours this week: 1) The Speed-to-Lead Workflow I stopped starting follow-up emails from scratch. How it works: I record the sales call directly in my workspace. Claude has access to my Brand Voice doc and my Product Guide. The Result: I feed the transcript to Claude, and it drafts a personalized email based on the prospect's actual pain points. It takes 90 seconds to review and hit send. 2) The Zero-Spreadsheet Data Analyst: I don’t do manual data entry for KPI trackers anymore. How it works: During my weekly metrics meetings, I just talk through the numbers: subscribers, CPL, revenue. The Result: Claude reads the meeting transcript, extracts the data points, and updates my database automatically. I haven't manually touched a spreadsheet in a month. 3) The Infinite Context Content Engine: I stopped staring at a blank cursor for LinkedIn/Reddit posts. How it works: I built a "Knowledge Hub" with all my past newsletters and internal notes. The Result: I use a prompt that references that specific internal knowledge. It drafts content that actually sounds like me because it’s referencing my real ideas, not generic LLM "as a leading provider" fluff. The reason people think AI is a "gimmick" is because they’re giving it zero context. When you copy-paste a prompt into a blank window, the AI is just guessing. When your AI can see your brand voice, your products, and your transcripts all in one system, it stops guessing and starts operating. This is from me, guys. I’d love to hear what other business owners are doing with Claude. We should share practical usecases beyond the marketing hype submitted by /u/damonflowers [link] [comments]
View originalWhich AI skills/Tool are actually worth learning for the future?
Hi everyone, I’m feeling a bit overwhelmed by the whole AI space and would really appreciate some honest advice. I want to build an AI-related skill set over the next months that is: • future-proof • well-paid • actually in demand by companies • and potentially useful for freelancing or building my own business later Everywhere I look, I see terms like: AI automation, AI agents, prompt engineering, n8n, maker, Zapier, Claude Code, claude cowork, AI product manager, Agentic Ai, etc. My problem is that I don’t have a clear overview of what is truly valuable and what is mostly hype. About me: I’m more interested in business, e-commerce, systems, automation, product thinking, and strategy — not so much hardcore ML research. My questions: Which AI jobs, skills and Tools do you think will be the most valuable over the next 5–10 years? Which path would you recommend for someone like me? And what should I start learning first, so which skill and which Tool? Thanks a Lot! submitted by /u/RabbitExternal2874 [link] [comments]
View originalI have Claude Pro and want to use it to maximize everything possible, including income.
I feel like I am sitting on something incredibly powerful, but I am only using a fraction of it. I have been using Claude Pro consistently, and I have already seen real gains, especially with Claude Code helping me move much faster when building or debugging. I know there is another level to this that I have not unlocked yet. I am not trying to casually use AI. I am trying to get serious leverage to make money, save time, and automate parts of my life and work. I want systems that actually compound, not one-off wins or fluff. I am willing to put in effort, but I want that effort pointed in the right direction. I am especially curious about real, repeatable workflows that generate income. How are people actually using Claude Pro to make money? Are you freelancing, building products, running services, or doing something else entirely? What does the workflow look like from start to finish? I am not looking for vague theory. I want to see the step-by-step process. Automation is another big focus for me. I want to know how you are using Claude Pro to handle things like email, research, task management, or planning. Are you combining it with APIs, scripts, Zapier, or other tools? What runs on autopilot in your daily or weekly system, and what still requires your input? Claude Code has already helped me move faster in coding, debugging, and generating components, but I know there is a whole level of advanced usage that most people are not talking about. Are you using it for full project scaffolding, refactoring, or testing pipelines? Are there non-obvious prompting strategies, setups, or tricks that make a real difference? I also want to understand what separates casual users from people getting serious leverage. Is it better prompting, smarter systems, tool stacking, or just more volume and iteration? What habits or approaches make the difference between scratching the surface and actually scaling your results? If you have built something that is actually working, I would love for you to share specifics. What is the workflow, which tools do you combine with Claude, rough results like time saved or income generated, and any hidden tricks or habits that made a big difference? I am not looking for hacks or fluff. I am looking for systems that hold up over time and produce real results. Right now it feels like most people, including myself, are barely scratching the surface. I am trying to see what is actually possible if you go all in. submitted by /u/Ok_Confidence4529 [link] [comments]
View originalI open-sourced a Claude skill that autonomously manages a LinkedIn profile — 22 days of real data, anti-detection system included
For 22 days I ran a Claude Cowork system managing a LinkedIn profile end-to-end: daily posting from a pillar calendar, engagement sessions, DM triage, weekly reporting. Today I published the full system as a free, open-source Claude skill. Results (unfiltered): 45 → 55 followers (+22% in 22 days) Engagement rate: 3.0% (vs 2.21% baseline) 75+ AI-written comments, all contextual 0 detection incidents How it works: A 5-phase wizard that extracts your voice (15 questions), builds a pillar calendar with emotional registers per day, sets up engagement with anti-detection rules, shows you all 10 tasks for approval, then creates cron jobs. Anti-detection (the hard part): NDI (Natural Dialogue Index): each session scored 1-10, stops below 5.0 7 anti-pattern rules born from Day 1 mistakes Epistemic Verification Gate: forces fact-checking before commenting on posts citing specific cases (born after a real wrong-inference incident on Day 7) Stack: Claude Cowork + Chrome MCP + Python + Google Cloud. No Zapier/n8n/Make. Repo (free, MIT): https://github.com/videomakingio-gif/claude-linkedin-automation Install: npx skills add videomakingio-gif/claude-linkedin-automation Happy to answer questions on architecture or anti-detection methodology. submitted by /u/NiceMarket7327 [link] [comments]
View originalClaude isn’t "hallucinating" your prompts just have zero context. Here’s how I fixed it.
Founders keep trying to "automate" their lives with complex AI stacks, and I see the same thing happen again and again. They end up with 15 tabs open, copy-pasting Claude prompts back and forth, trying to duct-tape everything together with Zapier workflows that quietly break every week. It looks productive, but they’re spending more time managing the AI than actually running the business. The shift I’ve seen work isn’t adding more tools, it’s removing fragmentation. The Problem: Claude is Brilliant, but It's Blind The reason people think AI is a gimmick or complain about hallucinations is simple: not enough context. When you copy-paste a prompt into a blank Claude window, it’s basically guessing what you want because it doesn’t have the full picture of your business. I’ve moved my SOPs, meeting notes, and CRM into Notion to serve as the structured foundation, using Claude as the intelligence layer. When Claude has access to your actual brand voice, product docs, and transcripts in one workspace, it stops guessing and starts producing elite output. How this looks in practice with a structured workspace: The "Speed-to-Lead" Agent: I don't spend an hour polishing follow-up emails. I record the sales call directly in the workspace. Because Claude has access to my brand voice and product docs right there, it drafts a personalized email based on the prospect's actual pain points in 90 seconds. The Data Analyst: I’ve stopped manual data entry for KPI trackers. During weekly metrics meetings, I just talk through the numbers (subscribers, CPL, revenue). Claude reads the transcript, extracts the data, and updates my Notion databases automatically. The Infinite Context Content Engine: I don’t ideate from scratch. I built a hub with all my past newsletters and internal notes. My prompts pull from that internal knowledge, so Claude drafts content that actually sounds like me because it’s referencing real ideas, not generic LLM training data. The Shift from Prompting to Building: If you want real leverage, stop looking for the "magic prompt." The best way to use Claude isn't through better adjectives in a chat box; it's by giving it a world-class education on your specific business operations. I am convinced that no type of perfect prompt can get better results than AI with full context. I think we should stop overhyping prompt engineering and start focusing on building the foundations that actually make AI useful. What do you think? submitted by /u/damonflowers [link] [comments]
View originalyou should definitely check out these open-source repo if you are building Ai agents
1. Activepieces Open-source automation + AI agents platform with MCP support. Good alternative to Zapier with AI workflows. Supports hundreds of integrations. 2. Cherry Studio AI productivity studio with chat, agents and tools. Works with multiple LLM providers. Good UI for agent workflows. 3. LocalAI Run OpenAI-style APIs locally. Works without GPU. Great for self-hosted AI projects. more.... submitted by /u/Mysterious-Form-3681 [link] [comments]
View originalYes, Zapier offers a free tier. Pricing found: $1, $1, $500,000, $150, $150
Key features include: Real AI workflows, and real results, that you can get today, Get started right now with our library of templates, Don't take our word for it. Take theirs., Connect 300+ AI tools to your everyday apps, Automate smarter with AI, Automater smarter with AI, Power tools that turn basic automation into business transformation, Enterprise-grade workflows that IT actually loves.
Zapier is commonly used for: Real teams, real AI workflows, real results.
Based on 17 social mentions analyzed, 0% of sentiment is positive, 100% neutral, and 0% negative.
Dharmesh Shah
CTO at HubSpot
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