Our powerful, flexible and easy to use no-code platform lets you quickly digitise your routine customer service related tasks, customer journeys, actions, follow-ups, questions, knowledge & policies. Then surface these to your customers via a dedicated self-service portal or by using our embeds which enable you to bring content and self-service functionality from Malcolm! into your existing websites, apps or products.
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The product is more powerful
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Since 2003 we’ve been designing, building and operating bespoke customer servicing focused systems for companies and organisations around the world. We’ve seen first hand the positive and transformative effect these systems deliver to our clients and their users. We’ve learnt a lot along the way about how best to design such systems and the features and technical approaches that make things stable, robust and usable. It has long been an ambition of ours to create a powerful, flexible and easy to use SaaS product available at a very competitive price. Malcolm! is that ambition realised. We hope that businesses large and small, all over the world, will use Malcolm! to make their own business better.
Malcolm App's answer
Malcolm App's answer
Our combination of features and the teams experience of building customer servicing systems (for over 20 years!)
Malcolm App's answer
Companies and/or organisations who have a high and growing level of customer service activity
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Based on our record, Stack Overflow Trends seems to be more popular. It has been mentiond 28 times since March 2021. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
It has, but it wasn't adopted by the pragmatists in that time. It's hard to tell if the early adopters adopted it either - It doesn't show up at all in the 2023 stack overflow survey (nor in the previous two years) - https://survey.stackoverflow.co/2023/#technology-most-popular-technologies - It doesn't show up in questions asked on Stackoverflow since 2008 -... - Source: Hacker News / 6 months ago
> In 2017 I had React projects in production for years. I doubt that. React wasn't stable until 2015, and wasn't mainstream until 2016. > And it only got worse and the overengineering to make it looks fast in the first load is not worth it as modern JS frameworks are faster than React out-of-the-box. Again, Next.js != React; the former builds on the latter, it doesn't replace it nor does it claim to be the same... - Source: Hacker News / 7 months ago
> Prior to Next.js, React was hard to setup and maintain No, it wasn't. > I started using Next.js in 2017. It made React a real production framework In 2017 I had React projects in production for years. > React was hard to setup and maintain and hard to make it go fast (on first load) And it only got worse and the overengineering to make it looks fast in the first load is not worth it as modern JS frameworks are... - Source: Hacker News / 7 months ago
Based on what? https://insights.stackoverflow.com/trends?tags=python%2Cjava. - Source: Hacker News / 9 months ago
Fair enough, my information is outdated. StackOverflow agrees. [1] [1] https://insights.stackoverflow.com/trends?tags=django%2Cruby-on-rails. - Source: Hacker News / 9 months ago
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