Alternatives to AskNicely logo

Alternatives to AskNicely

Wootric, Delighted, WordPress, Google AdSense, and Mailchimp are the most popular alternatives and competitors to AskNicely.
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What is AskNicely and what are its top alternatives?

Collect customer experience feedback on a daily basis and empower your team to take immediate action to drive retention, upgrades, reviews and referrals.
AskNicely is a tool in the Survey Widget category of a tech stack.

Top Alternatives to AskNicely

  • Wootric
    Wootric

    It is a simple and powerful way to listen to your customers inside your product. We measure Net Promoter Score (NPS), a recognized and rigorous customer happiness metric, to keep an ongoing pulse on how your customers feel about your product. Get contextual product feedback and analytics to help you improve your product and drive agile development. ...

  • Delighted
    Delighted

    The fastest and easiest way to gather actionable feedback from your customers. Delighted uses the Net Promoter System to gather real feedback from your customers – in minutes not weeks. ...

  • WordPress
    WordPress

    The core software is built by hundreds of community volunteers, and when you’re ready for more there are thousands of plugins and themes available to transform your site into almost anything you can imagine. Over 60 million people have chosen WordPress to power the place on the web they call “home” — we’d love you to join the family. ...

  • Google AdSense
    Google AdSense

    It is a program run by Google through which website publishers in the Google Network of content sites serve text, images, video, or interactive media advertisements that are targeted to the site content and audience. ...

  • Mailchimp
    Mailchimp

    MailChimp helps you design email newsletters, share them on social networks, integrate with services you already use, and track your results. It's like your own personal publishing platform. ...

  • HubSpot
    HubSpot

    Attract, convert, close and delight customers with HubSpot’s complete set of marketing tools. HubSpot all-in-one marketing software helps more than 12,000 companies in 56 countries attract leads and convert them into customers. ...

  • Drupal
    Drupal

    Drupal is an open source content management platform powering millions of websites and applications. It’s built, used, and supported by an active and diverse community of people around the world. ...

  • InVision
    InVision

    InVision lets you create stunningly realistic interactive wireframes and prototypes without compromising your creative vision. ...

AskNicely alternatives & related posts

Wootric logo

Wootric

14
0
Make customer experience your competitive edge
14
0
PROS OF WOOTRIC
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    CONS OF WOOTRIC
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      Delighted logo

      Delighted

      33
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      NPS made easy. The fastest and easiest way to gather actionable feedback from your customers
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      PROS OF DELIGHTED
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        CONS OF DELIGHTED
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          We are looking to launch our first NPS Survey. Any recommendations on a good place to start? Tools in considering are Delighted or SurveyMonkey. Preferably link the analytics with Marketo.

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          WordPress logo

          WordPress

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            Plugins & themes
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            Really powerful
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            Rapid website development
          • 78
            Best documentation
          • 51
            Codex
          • 44
            Product feature set
          • 35
            Custom/internal social network
          • 18
            Open source
          • 8
            Great for all types of websites
          • 7
            Huge install and user base
          • 5
            I like it like I like a kick in the groin
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            It's simple and easy to use by any novice
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            Perfect example of user collaboration
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            Open Source Community
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            Most websites make use of it
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            Best
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            API-based CMS
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            Community
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            Easy To use
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            <a href="https://secure.wphackedhel">Easy Beginner</a>
          CONS OF WORDPRESS
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            Hard to keep up-to-date if you customize things
          • 13
            Plugins are of mixed quality
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            Not best backend UI
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            Complex Organization
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            Do not cover all the basics in the core
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            Great Security

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          Dale Ross
          Independent Contractor at Self Employed · | 22 upvotes · 1.6M views

          I've heard that I have the ability to write well, at times. When it flows, it flows. I decided to start blogging in 2013 on Blogger. I started a company and joined BizPark with the Microsoft Azure allotment. I created a WordPress blog and did a migration at some point. A lot happened in the time after that migration but I stopped coding and changed cities during tumultuous times that taught me many lessons concerning mental health and productivity. I eventually graduated from BizSpark and outgrew the credit allotment. That killed the WordPress blog.

          I blogged about writing again on the existing Blogger blog but it didn't feel right. I looked at a few options where I wouldn't have to worry about hosting cost indefinitely and Jekyll stood out with GitHub Pages. The Importer was fairly straightforward for the existing blog posts.

          Todo * Set up redirects for all posts on blogger. The URI format is different so a complete redirect wouldn't work. Although, there may be something in Jekyll that could manage the redirects. I did notice the old URLs were stored in the front matter. I'm working on a command-line Ruby gem for the current plan. * I did find some of the lost WordPress posts on archive.org that I downloaded with the waybackmachinedownloader. I think I might write an importer for that. * I still have a few Disqus comment threads to map

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          hello guys, I need your help. I created a website, I've been using Elementor forever, but yesterday I bought a template after I made the purchase I knew I made a mistake, cause the template was in HTML, can anyone please show me how to put this HTML template in my WordPress so it will be the face of my website, thank you in advance.

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          Google AdSense logo

          Google AdSense

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          A program that allows bloggers and website owners to make money by displaying Google ads
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          PROS OF GOOGLE ADSENSE
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            CONS OF GOOGLE ADSENSE
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              Plenty installs but low on actual users

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            which of the ads platform pays better? What about PurpleAds?

            Google AdSense has refused to post ads on my site.

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            Really can not decide which one to add. Google AdSense email say that they are ready to show ads... Taboola is on review.

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            Mailchimp logo

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            Easy email newsletters
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              Mailing list
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              Robust e-mail creation
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              Integrates with a lot of external services
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              Custom templates
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              Free tier
            • 49
              Great api
            • 42
              Great UI
            • 33
              A/B Testing Subject Lines
            • 30
              Broad feature set
            • 11
              Subscriber Analytics
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              Great interface. The standard for email marketing
            • 8
              Great documentation
            • 8
              Mandrill integration
            • 7
              Segmentation
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              Best deliverability; helps you be the good guy
            • 5
              Facebook Integration
            • 5
              Autoresponders
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              Customization
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              RSS-to-email
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              Co-branding
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              Embedded signup forms
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              Automation
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              Great logo
            • 1
              Groups
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              Landing pages
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              Super expensive
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              Poor API
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              Charged based on subscribers as opposed to emails sent

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            Kirill Shirinkin
            Cloud and DevOps Consultant at mkdev · | 12 upvotes · 696.1K views

            As a small startup we are very conscious about picking up the tools we use to run the project. After suffering with a mess of using at the same time Trello , Slack , Telegram and what not, we arrived at a small set of tools that cover all our current needs. For product management, file sharing, team communication etc we chose Basecamp and couldn't be more happy about it. For Customer Support and Sales Intercom works amazingly well. We are using MailChimp for email marketing since over 4 years and it still covers all our needs. Then on payment side combination of Stripe and Octobat helps us to process all the payments and generate compliant invoices. On techie side we use Rollbar and GitLab (for both code and CI). For corporate email we picked G Suite. That all costs us in total around 300$ a month, which is quite okay.

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            Spenser Coke
            Product Engineer at Loanlink.de · | 9 upvotes · 298.7K views

            When starting a new company and building a new product w/ limited engineering we chose to optimize for expertise and rapid development, landing on Rails API, w/ AngularJS on the front.

            The reality is that we're building a CRUD app, so we considered going w/ vanilla Rails MVC to optimize velocity early on (it may not be sexy, but it gets the job done). Instead, we opted to split the codebase to allow for a richer front-end experience, focus on skill specificity when hiring, and give us the flexibility to be consumed by multiple clients in the future.

            We also considered .NET core or Node.js for the API layer, and React on the front-end, but our experiences dealing with mature Node APIs and the rapid-fire changes that comes with state management in React-land put us off, given our level of experience with those tools.

            We're using GitHub and Trello to track issues and projects, and a plethora of other tools to help the operational team, like Zapier, MailChimp, Google Drive with some basic Vue.js & HTML5 apps for smaller internal-facing web projects.

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              Drupal logo

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                Digital customer experience delivery platform
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                Really powerful
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                Customizable
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                Flexible
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                Good tool for prototyping
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                Enterprise proven over many years when others failed
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                Headless adds even more power/flexibility
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                Open source
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                Each version becomes more intuitive for clients to use
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                Well documented
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                Lego blocks methodology
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                Caching and performance
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                Powerful
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              Jan Vlnas
              Senior Software Engineer at Mews · | 5 upvotes · 56.1K views

              Depends on what options and technologies you have available, and how do you deploy your website.

              There are CMSs which update existing static pages through FTP: You provide access credentials, mark editable parts of your HTML in a markup, and then edit the content through the hosted CMS. I know two systems which work like that: Cushy CMS and Surreal CMS.

              If the source of your site is versioned through Git (and hosted on GitHub), you have other options, like Netlify CMS, Spinal CMS, Siteleaf, Forestry, or CloudCannon. Some of these also need you to use static site generator (like 11ty, Jekyll, or Hugo).

              If you have some server-side scripting support available (typically PHP) you can also consider some flat-file based, server-side systems, like Kirby CMS or Lektor, which are usually simpler to retrofit into an existing template than “traditional” CMSs (WordPress, Drupal).

              Finally, you could also use a desktop-based static site generator which provides a user-friendly GUI, and then locally generates and uploads the website. For example Publii, YouDoCMS, Agit CMS.

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                It revolutionized the way I share work with clients
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                Legendary customer support
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                Priit Kaasik
                CTO at Katana Cloud Inventory · | 8 upvotes · 582.9K views

                How we ended up choosing Confluence as our internal web / wiki / documentation platform at Katana.

                It happened because we chose Bitbucket over GitHub . We had Katana's first hackaton to assemble and test product engineering platform. It turned out that at that time you could have Bitbucket's private repositories and a team of five people for free - Done!

                This decision led us to using Bitbucket pipelines for CI, Jira for Kanban, and finally, Confluence. We also use Microsoft Office 365 and started with using OneNote, but SharePoint is still a nightmare product to use to collaborate, so OneNote had to go.

                Now, when thinking of the key value of Confluence to Katana then it is Product Requirements Management. We use Page Properties macros, integrations (with Slack , InVision, Sketch etc.) to manage Product Roadmap, flash out Epic and User Stories.

                We ended up with using Confluence because it is the best fit for our current engineering ecosystem.

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                Nadia Matveyeva
                UI Designer at freelancer · | 5 upvotes · 161.8K views
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                Thank you in advance! Nadia

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