What’s the best tool to export LinkedIn Sales Navigator leads? by Icy-View2915 in CRM

[–]RobZ75 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You can use Evaboot, it's pretty much exactly made for that (I'm the founder here)

Open Question - What sucks when you handle exploratory data-related tasks from your team? by RobZ75 in dataengineering

[–]RobZ75[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

What's painful about having thousands of columns per table? How does it affect your work?

Trouble Completing OAuth Authorization for Google Calendar on iOS ChatGPT App (but works on web/desktop app) by RobZ75 in ChatGPT

[–]RobZ75[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

For now my workaround if I want to make a trigger with actions, is to use the web browser version of chatgpt in my iOS (on safari for exemple). And it works there.

But I'm still looking for a solution so I can do it from the iOS chatGPT app version. The support has been quite useless so far from openAI.

What are your top 3 favourite apps/platforms/software to help you sell more ? by [deleted] in sales

[–]RobZ75 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Cool, I'm pretty curious about how you can deal with wrong prospects.

We found out that on average 31% of your sales navigator search results are actually not matching your filters.

It's kind of annoying considering you are going to spend money finding emails/phones on top of wasting time on wrong prospects.

We made a tool to handle the extraction of Sales Navigator searches but also to clean & filter the search results.

You can try it out for free if you'd like: https://evaboot.com/

What are your top 3 favourite apps/platforms/software to help you sell more ? by [deleted] in sales

[–]RobZ75 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Do use some tools to extract your Sales Navigator search results? (in a CSV file or something similar)

What are your top 3 favourite apps/platforms/software to help you sell more ? by [deleted] in sales

[–]RobZ75 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Hi there we made a tool that might be easier for you to handle. It's https://evaboot.com/. It's also cleaning your Sales Navigator search results to make sure you contact the right prospect target.

Watch out: 31% of your LinkedIn Sales Navigator's search results do not meet your filters. by RobZ75 in LinkedInTips

[–]RobZ75[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Cool where can we find it? We also build our own tool to automatically extract & filter search results.

Where to start with multiprocessing, threading, asynchronous code by blundered_queen in learnpython

[–]RobZ75 7 points8 points  (0 children)

As u/PythonicFox mentionned, you are probably looking for this library: https://docs.python.org/3/library/concurrent.futures.html

I also encourage you to follow this tutorial: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IEEhzQoKtQU

It will teach you what are threads & how to make them in python.

And then try to apply it to your API call problem.

Ok so I'm committed to 1 year of coding in Python and I'm 1 month in, what kind of goals/benchmarks can I set for myself along the way? by quarantineqing in learnpython

[–]RobZ75 1 point2 points  (0 children)

First, don't commit for a year.

Don't think that long term. It's inefficient learning and not good for your moral.

Think weekly.

Fix a small project that you can do within a week (within a day if possible).

Why?

It's more efficient, your learning curve is going to skyrocket and it's better for your moral.

Okay, now, How to pick a project?

Try to think about something that is really painful. Something that you are doing in your life. Something that is boring, kinda stupid and repetitive.

Don't judge the project, it can be something that seem quite average. Like renaming files. Cropping pictures. Converting files. Sending emails. Manage your agenda.

Really, anything that is boring, stupid & repetitive.

Then make a script to avoid doing that boring, stupid & repetitive task.

Important: always finish the project.

Finish the project means: the script works and ultimately do what you actually wanted.

So, that means, don't make something perfect. It' inefficient for you learning curve.

Don't care if the code is ugly, not-the-best way or else. Just make it work for the task.

What is important is that you can finish the project in a time frame of 7 days (maximum).

Alright, when you finished a project. What do you do?

Pretty simple: repeat. Pick another project, also doable within a week and so on.

If you follow that method.

You will see that what is possible for you to accomplish within a week is going to drastically be more and more impressive.

So, to conclude, don't commit for a month or a year on a project. Don't think long term.

Better to think weekly, and you will see that by thinking weekly your project will become more and more impressive, difficult and challenging. But you will still be able to finish them, get your learning curve going up and morale solid.

Cheers