Yes, I’m using this app but to get data to Power BI for reports and is pretty good, their support is very responsive.
However, you can also try Skyvia as it has a HubSpot backup function in their free tier as well:
Yeah, we've done it after we found Skyvia. It's a 3rd-party tool that doesn't require any coding. Thus, we save time and efforts significantly.
Hi. We've actually wrote a blog post on what Reverse ETL is, most common use cases and tools. I think that the most important part of Reverse ETL is not in the reverse target and source, but in the data enrichment in between. Our clients most often need to enrich their data from the source with something from a marketing\sales source before getting it loaded back to Snowflake.
I was searching for the MySQL ETL tool, and I must say that your top list is outdated. Here I found the detailed description of the top free and paid ETL tools for MySQL on the end of 2021.
Hi! That's a nice question you've asked. The most popular 5 tools are
Read more about them here
Hi, If you need professional approach, then I recommend you to deal with this cool online sql editor. It will be able to offer you unique solutions. It is handy and pretty fast. Good luck
You can do a data backup and pay the $15 or $20 (I forgot) for additional backups above the two that you get per month.
Structure the reports such that there are three or four separate reports to extract the data and reassemble it through Excel.
Other API based exports like Skyvia.com hit the API which has its own limits.
Out of the box there doesn't seem to be a way to do this.
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You can try https://skyvia.com/, they seem to have a free product to do this, but it's pretty limited in the free version. Dataloader.io also can do this, but it's $300 a month to unlock SFTP exports.
Hello. You can also use Skyvia Salesforce Data loader - it is able to mass import tasks as well.
Here's the tutorial. I used this tool for my pet project - they have 2 weeks free trial, so it may be enough for an one-time upload.
Hi!
Unfortunately, ETL tool is the only way. Use services like Skyvia to automatically load necessary Zendesk tickets data to the data warehouse and then access it from Tableau. I'm not that technically qualified, so I appreciate that Skyvia is a no-coding solution. I found it on G2 https://skyvia.com/data-integration/analyze-zendesk-with-tableau
We've done it via a 3rd-party tool. It seems to be the only way to create an integration between Zendesk and Tableau. We chose Skyvia (https://skyvia.com/data-integration/analyze-zendesk-with-tableau) that allows us to load Zendesk data in SQL Server and then connect to Tableau. We didn't find a direct way to connect Zendesk with Tableau, but one more step isn't a big problem - Skyvia works fast.
Anyone tried Skyvia? It doesn’t seem to have great SEO (sure, not a good judge of product quality, but makes me wonder a bit) and there don’t seem to be many reviews of it yet. https://skyvia.com/backup/jira-backup Rewind are releasing a product apparently, but it’s not here yet.
I think that this app is great - I'm using another one, called Skyvia, though. It is also free, cloud-based, no coding and allows to mass update even several fields without record ID. It also doesn't have an "undo" button, but it has a backup option, so I play it safe.
There is also 3 different option on how to mass update Salesforce records - via data loader, via SQL and via filtering.
Here is a tutorial on it: https://skyvia.com/blog/top-3-ways-to-mass-update-salesforce-records
Sounds amazing! I was briefly toying with the idea of a startup that would tackle this problem. I was thinking that constructing the backups from the API endpoints would be the obvious approach too. But then I realized that we're probably the 0.5% of the consumer market that actually cares about this stuff!
Are you planning on open sourcing / posting the project somewhere? Would love to follow progress.
Also, in case it helps, Skyvia is the closest thing I've seen to what I was envisioning in terms of supported services. But it's definitely more enterprise-focused and there are some gaps in terms of consumer level SaaS. Nice looking program, though.