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Linkedin Creating my own No-Code LinkedIn Automation Tool.

Kurobi

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Hey Everyone!

I’ve been working in the LinkedIn outreach space for a while now, and I’ve tried many different LinkedIn automation tools like Expandi, Walaxy, Meet Alfred, and others.

But I was never fully happy with these tools because they didn’t have CRM features, like adding status to each contact, setting follow-up messages or sequences for certain days, and it was tough to keep track of each contact, especially when managing multiple LinkedIn accounts.

That’s why I’ve decided to create my own LinkedIn automation tool for personal use and for future clients.

I know many of you have used LinkedIn automation before, so I’m curious about your experience. What automation tool are you using now, and what features or solutions would you like to see in LinkedIn automation?
 

Ivanteli

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Scraping leads and pulling data.

Also, having multiple users and proxy support would be great. I’d like to set daily limits for each account and slowly increase them over time.

Currently, I’m using Kanbox, and it’s been working well so far.

I’m excited to see your solution, and I’d be happy to give it a try. Count me in as a beta tester if you decide to go ahead with this.

Good luck!
 

HotSport

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Seems like a great idea! I’m not really involved in this area, but best of luck!
 

Kurobi

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Scraping leads and pulling data.

Also, having multiple users and proxy support would be great. I’d like to set daily limits for each account and slowly increase them over time.

Currently, I’m using Kanbox, and it’s been working well so far.

I’m excited to see your solution, and I’d be happy to give it a try. Count me in as a beta tester if you decide to go ahead with this.

Good luck!

Thanks a lot! I’ll reach out to you once my Beta is ready.
 

Readdi

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I’m interested! I’d love to automate interactions like liking or reacting to contributions. I haven’t found any tools that do that yet. They usually only handle posts. Engagement pods would be awesome too! :)
 

ZineBunny

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What programming language are you using?
 

Jazzmed

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Curious,
I actually use LH3n, and it's pretty effective...
I need to try out Kanbox...
 

Poolab

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I want to use it for one LinkedIn, my personal profile if possible. Let me know when it's set up. Thanks!
 

Tensco

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Hey Everyone!

I’ve been working in the LinkedIn outreach space for a while now, and I’ve tried many different LinkedIn automation tools like Expandi, Walaxy, Meet Alfred, and others.

But I was never fully happy with these tools because they didn’t have CRM features, like adding status to each contact, setting follow-up messages or sequences for certain days, and it was tough to keep track of each contact, especially when managing multiple LinkedIn accounts.

That’s why I’ve decided to create my own LinkedIn automation tool for personal use and for future clients.

I know many of you have used LinkedIn automation before, so I’m curious about your experience. What automation tool are you using now, and what features or solutions would you like to see in LinkedIn automation?

I'm new to automation, especially with LinkedIn.

Is it possible to get email info from LinkedIn if we provide a profile link or maybe the company's name?
 

DreamyContent

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I've been using phantombuster.com to find leads. It works okay, but it can get pricey.
 

GambitTeen

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Hey Everyone!

I’ve been working in the LinkedIn outreach space for a while now, and I’ve tried many different LinkedIn automation tools like Expandi, Walaxy, Meet Alfred, and others.

But I was never fully happy with these tools because they didn’t have CRM features, like adding status to each contact, setting follow-up messages or sequences for certain days, and it was tough to keep track of each contact, especially when managing multiple LinkedIn accounts.

That’s why I’ve decided to create my own LinkedIn automation tool for personal use and for future clients.

I know many of you have used LinkedIn automation before, so I’m curious about your experience. What automation tool are you using now, and what features or solutions would you like to see in LinkedIn automation?

Hey there,

I'd love to hear how things went for you. I have a few projects that could use this—would you be interested in teaming up?

Message me!
 

Wonderwo

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I’ve been using Expandi, and it’s been working fine for me. Honestly, those kinds of tools are really helpful—you kind of need them. There’s not really another way around it.
 

Bugco

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I’ve got about 1,480 company website links, and I’m trying to find people or leads from those businesses. What’s the best tool or way to do this?
 

Pellico

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How’s the tool coming along? Still working on it, or did you decide to move on from the idea?
 

Cookenso

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Seems like you might’ve stopped. But if you’re still at it, I’d be really interested in giving it a try!
 

Evanger

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Hey Everyone!

I’ve been working in the LinkedIn outreach space for a while now, and I’ve tried many different LinkedIn automation tools like Expandi, Walaxy, Meet Alfred, and others.

But I was never fully happy with these tools because they didn’t have CRM features, like adding status to each contact, setting follow-up messages or sequences for certain days, and it was tough to keep track of each contact, especially when managing multiple LinkedIn accounts.

That’s why I’ve decided to create my own LinkedIn automation tool for personal use and for future clients.

I know many of you have used LinkedIn automation before, so I’m curious about your experience. What automation tool are you using now, and what features or solutions would you like to see in LinkedIn automation?
Have you ever thought about sharing this with everyone or putting it out there for more people to see?
 

Facerens

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A no-code tool isn’t really profitable if you're aiming to do serious work.

It just ends up giving basic tools to people who can't afford more.

No one serious really uses these tools.

Think carefully before you jump in.

I’ve had lots of programs made with this idea in mind, but it’s all just junk. If you want to do a lot with no-code, there’s always some kind of limit or problem.

If I wanted to help people who are struggling, I’d probably start a charity.

Maybe it's a good idea if you’re trying to attract angel investors, but I’m not interested in that.

Automation that creates its own automation is way more powerful—that’s what I’ve learned.

The truth is, when you build your own UIs, you can create a lot of templates with different options that a no-code tool just can’t offer.

Ask any C++ developers what they think about no-code tools—they’re among the highest paid engineers in the software world.

No-code tools give you a false sense of control. After using a few, like the ones listed above, you’ll see it’s a trap. Building your own stuff ends up the same way. They just don’t make you as powerful as they claim.

Once you start using UIs, you’re limiting yourself a lot. In industrial work, most things happen behind the scenes, not through the interface. Coding complex UIs is a lot of unpleasant work—it’s just draining.

If you want real power, you write your own operating system, compiler, and programming language.

By the way, there's no clear definition of a “no-code tool.” Everyone has their own idea of what it is. It’s just a marketing term meant to sell people things they don’t fully understand. Following trends or buzzwords to boost your business isn’t the way to real power. Metrics like DR and DA aren’t real indicators of success—just look at them, haha.

I know many of you have used LinkedIn automation before, so I’m curious about your experience. What automation tool are you using now, and what features or solutions would you like to see in LinkedIn automation?

Right now, you're making a basic mistake by adding random features to software that nobody really asked for.

You’re asking people who don’t put in much effort for ideas for software that doesn’t even have a clear purpose or goal.

If you’re really confident it’s useful, you just build it yourself and it makes you powerful, even without any fancy UI.

And if you decide to sell it, you can charge serious clients anywhere from $xxx to $xxxx a month because it’s that good.

Maybe add a simple UI that shows progress or stats, but don’t go overboard. Keep it simple with just a few buttons.

Creating tools that sell for $39 a month isn’t exciting—it doesn’t bring any real satisfaction. It’s like aiming for the lowest possible success in this field.

You could just buy something like that from a low-quality marketplace like seoclerks. You’ll get a bunch of features you don’t even need, but hey, you can still make $39 a month... with a high churn rate*.

Instead of letting competition drive you, let it teach you what mistakes others made, so you don’t repeat them.
 
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