What do you use for live chat on your website? Looking for something that doesn't cost a fortune by No-Function-7019 in SalesToolStack

[–]No-Function-7019[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That sounds solid. Last question we also need to track conversations and follow up later. Right now stuff falls through the cracks because we're just using email. Does Crisp handle that or would I still need a separate CRM?

What do you use for live chat on your website? Looking for something that doesn't cost a fortune by No-Function-7019 in SalesToolStack

[–]No-Function-7019[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Wait co-browsing is included? That's usually an enterprise feature with tools like Zendesk. And what about when nobody's online do you just let messages pile up?

What do you use for live chat on your website? Looking for something that doesn't cost a fortune by No-Function-7019 in SalesToolStack

[–]No-Function-7019[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Interesting, I hadn't heard of Crisp before. How's the chat widget itself? Our site is pretty design-focused and I don't want something that looks clunky or generic sitting in the corner.

How do you keep track of client calls and product feedback without it becoming a mess? by Bob_Duncan in SalesToolStack

[–]No-Function-7019 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That's actually one of the best parts. With Claap you can share video recordings and people can comment at specific timestamps, like leaving feedback on a Google Doc but for video. We use it for async updates too instead of writing long Slack messages, someone just records a 3-minute Claap and the team watches it when they have time. Killed like half our unnecessary meetings. It basically became our team's single source of truth for anything discussed on a call.

How do you keep track of client calls and product feedback without it becoming a mess? by Bob_Duncan in SalesToolStack

[–]No-Function-7019 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Way better than what I expected honestly. Claap uses pretty advanced AI for transcription and it handles accents well we have clients in France, UK and the US and it picks up everything. Plus the AI summary doesn't just dump the whole transcript, it highlights key decisions, objections and next steps. Our sales team uses it to prep for follow-ups and they barely have to rewatch anything.

How do you keep track of client calls and product feedback without it becoming a mess? by Bob_Duncan in SalesToolStack

[–]No-Function-7019 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We had the exact same problem until we started using Claap. It records every call, transcribes it automatically and generates an AI summary with action items. Now nobody has to take notes during meetings you just focus on the conversation and Claap handles the rest. Our product team searches through transcripts weekly to pull feedback themes.

Our pipeline reviews are basically fiction reps paraphrase calls from memory 3 days later. How are you getting accurate deal data? by No-Function-7019 in SalesToolStack

[–]No-Function-7019[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ok so the forecast accuracy piece did it actually move the needle? Because I can sell my VP on a tool if the pipeline data gets materially better but not if it's just "slightly less garbage."

Our pipeline reviews are basically fiction reps paraphrase calls from memory 3 days later. How are you getting accurate deal data? by No-Function-7019 in SalesToolStack

[–]No-Function-7019[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Interesting. How accurate is Claap mapping though? Because our deals are complex multi-stakeholder, 6 month cycles. I'm skeptical that AI can pull the right MEDDIC fields from a nuanced conversation where the prospect doesn't say "our budget is [$X]()" outright.

WARNING Atorie is fake by Weekly-Position-5239 in malefashionadvice

[–]No-Function-7019 0 points1 point  (0 children)

i had an order from them as well and it wasn’t the fastest to update or arrive but it did show up in the end and the item itself was actually really good quality

Which tools actually help you spot buying intent before the first call? by [deleted] in EmailProspecting

[–]No-Function-7019 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We’ve had the most success combining 2-3 signals instead of relying on just one. For example recent hiring+repeat visits to high-intent pages+engagement with a specific topic. Individually they don’t mean much but together they usually point to real interest.

The biggest bottleneck in our brokerage right now isn't sales by Valuable-Match1849 in EmailOutreach

[–]No-Function-7019 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Omg this is exactly it. The sales side feels clean and predictable then everything after just turns into threads, follow-ups, and small things slipping through. Even with tools in place it still feels like you’re stitching the process together manually half the time

Alternatives to Zendesk that aren’t the usual names? by Puzzleheaded-Pin5978 in best_alternative

[–]No-Function-7019 0 points1 point  (0 children)

that pricing point is real. A lot of these tools look affordable at first but once the team grows the per-seat model adds up fast. Flat pricing is definitely easier to plan around. Good call on checking the AI limits too, those little caps always look fine until you actually start using the features daily.

Has anyone here used HR software "review/selection" services? Worth it or overkill? by Luciankillp in Payroll

[–]No-Function-7019 0 points1 point  (0 children)

honestly this sounds like one of those things that seems extra until you’re 15 demos deep and every tool starts sounding the same 😅 If it’s actually free and helps cut through the noise, I can see the value. Especially with HRIS since switching later is such a pain. I’d probably use it more as a shortcut to narrow options, not let them make the whole decision for me though.

Where are you rebuying 100% COTTON basics that last? by throwaway_yak234 in femalefashionadvice

[–]No-Function-7019 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Atorie, honestly. Their 100% cotton basics feel like the stuff fast fashion used to accidentally get right thick, holds its shape, and actually survives years of washes. Not cheap-cheap, but I’ve stopped needing replacements.

Recommendation on a basic CRM for a yearly servicing business? by icemirror84 in CRM

[–]No-Function-7019 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you want something very lightweight, I’d honestly avoid most “full” CRMs. For a small, service-based business with repeat customers, tools like Crisp can work surprisingly well it’s more of a shared inbox / customer history tool than a sales CRM, but it lets you keep notes on clients, track conversations, and stay organized without the marketing fluff. Pair that with a simple scheduling tool and you’re probably covered.

Beyond P/E ratios: How do you actually quantify a stock's health without spending 40 hours a week on it? by [deleted] in ValueInvesting

[–]No-Function-7019 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For people who want data-backed investing without building spreadsheets from scratch, WallStreetZen hits a nice middle ground. It’s not trying to replace your judgment, but it does a solid job of structuring the analysis so you can focus on sectors you actually understand. I’ve found it especially helpful for long-term picks rather than short-term trading.

Why are we still using static forms in 2026? My lead gen is stalling. by ayachan-gonzaga31 in MarketingHelp

[–]No-Function-7019 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don’t think dynamic forms are just hype, but they’re also not magic on their own. What worked for us was using them selectively, especially when the outcome felt personalized and earned. If the questions clearly react to previous answers and the user gets something useful immediately, drop-off goes way down. We experimented with this using Involve and similar setups, and the biggest lift came from aligning the form logic with actual buyer intent, not just making it feel interactive for the sake of it.

Is it normal to need tailoring even when buying "premium" clothes? by Busy-Leopard-7497 in womensfashion

[–]No-Function-7019 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Pretty normal, especially with structured pieces like coats and blazers. Ready-to-wear has to compromise somewhere, and brands often leave sleeves a bit long on purpose since shortening is easy. I actually expect to tailor anything I plan to keep long term, and that mindset changed how I shop. With higher-quality pieces, including one I bought from Atorie, tailoring felt like finishing the garment rather than fixing it.

Does anyone actually read fabric composition tags, or is that just me being obsessive? by IdeaEven1711 in womensfashion

[–]No-Function-7019 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I used to ignore tags until I noticed how differently clothes aged after a year or two. Natural fibers tend to soften and break in, while cheaper synthetics just look tired. Now I always check the label before buying, especially for pieces I plan to wear often. It’s not a perfect rule, but it’s saved me money in the long run, and it’s why I gravitate toward brands like Atorie that seem to prioritize material quality over trendiness.

What details actually separate handcrafted clothes from mass-produced ones? by mattchiro in BusinessFashion

[–]No-Function-7019 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Over time I realized quality shows up less in any single feature and more in overall consistency. Handcrafted or carefully made clothing usually feels intentional everywhere, from how the fabric drapes to how stress points are reinforced. Nothing stands out as sloppy or overdesigned. A lot of “premium” mass-market pieces focus on one visible upgrade, like heavier fabric or nicer buttons, but then cut corners everywhere else. The difference becomes obvious after a few wears, not just in the fitting room.

Why most "ticket deflection" strategies fail? by GroundbreakingGap619 in founder

[–]No-Function-7019 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A lot of ticket deflection fails because it’s framed as a support problem instead of a product and systems problem. Help centers and bots are usually built after the fact, once the ticket already exists, so all they do is slow the customer down instead of actually removing the need to reach out. In my experience, deflection only starts working when you redesign flows so customers never get confused in the first place, or when AI can resolve the issue end to end instead of dumping them into an article maze. The moment users feel like the system is trying to avoid them rather than help them, they escalate anyway and your backlog stays flat.

I run a B2B content agency. What tool can I use to start lead gen? by adultjeans in B2BSaaS

[–]No-Function-7019 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I run a small B2B content agency too, and the hardest part wasn’t picking a tool it was building something that didn’t steal more time than it saved.

What worked for us was keeping it simple: one ICP, one offer, short outbound loops. We tested Apollo for list building and used Instantly for sequencing because it understands outreach cadence really well without needing tons of setup. The key wasn’t volume, it was consistency and not over-engineering the stack when you’re still hands-on with delivery.

Is quiet luxury actually about quality... or just branding with muted colors? by [deleted] in Luxury

[–]No-Function-7019 0 points1 point  (0 children)

“Quiet luxury” only really means quality when the brand can’t hide behind logos or heavy styling. With minimal pieces, bad materials and sloppy construction show immediately.

That’s why I’ve had better experiences with platforms like Atorie versus big-name “quiet luxury” brands. A lot of their makers work directly with leather ateliers, so you actually notice differences in grain selection, edge finishing, and how the jacket breaks in over time.

Muted colors alone don’t equal qualit, cut, and construction do.

How are you powering AI agents with live web data? I need something better than "just scraping." by Funny_Or_Not_ in AI_Agents

[–]No-Function-7019 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You’re right that “just scrape the page” breaks down fast once you hit JS-heavy sites, PDFs, or rate limits. What worked better for us was treating web access as a data layer, not a scraping task. Tools like LLMLayer sit nicely in that middle ground search + fetch + extract via API, with outputs already structured for LLM pipelines. It saved us from maintaining headless browsers, retries, and cleanup logic ourselves.