Thanks for putting it all together.
Could you tell, if it's possible to learn 1-2 most useful nocode tools using this tutorial and start developing projects for paying customers?
Do I need any additional courses, studies?
If yes, could you recommend?
My tip for you is: don't build something. Do not build projects. Go ask people in a niche what problem they have. Find out by asking a lot of people. Say you have a solution and its $X. If they say okay, work on the solution.
Far superior? Yes. But not everyone is willing to learn to code and many projects end up being unworthy of paying someone else to build. These tools provide a good way for non-coders to hack something together to prove out an idea.
That something will be buggy, broken in many ways, easily crippled by a third-party integration breaking, and fail every speed and structure test... but most no-code tools shouldn't be used for production apps.
Thanks for the link! I'm thinking about getting into building tools for nocode so I love seeing what's already possible.
wow great ...
what did you use to create the 3d Illustration?
Excellent! I have already seen you, your service is really useful because I myself recently started to get involved in NoCode
wow i like it
but can you add more zapier tutorials also?
Quite useful guides for nocoders of any skill level
Oh, thank you for your collection
I just start my NoCode journey and your resource is really helpful:)
Hey Nick!
Thanks for putting it all together.
Could you tell, if it's possible to learn 1-2 most useful nocode tools using this tutorial and start developing projects for paying customers?
Do I need any additional courses, studies?
If yes, could you recommend?
My tip for you is: don't build something. Do not build projects. Go ask people in a niche what problem they have. Find out by asking a lot of people. Say you have a solution and its $X. If they say okay, work on the solution.
This comment was deleted 3 years ago.
Far superior? Yes. But not everyone is willing to learn to code and many projects end up being unworthy of paying someone else to build. These tools provide a good way for non-coders to hack something together to prove out an idea.
That something will be buggy, broken in many ways, easily crippled by a third-party integration breaking, and fail every speed and structure test... but most no-code tools shouldn't be used for production apps.
This comment was deleted 3 years ago.
Preaching to the choir.
This comment was deleted 3 years ago.