Mar 17, 2021 Airtable Airtable is an interesting sandwich of Excel and Notion. It's not a note-taking app (though you can use it as a note-taking app as well). The San-Francisco-based startup is an easy-to-use online platform for creating and sharing relational databases.
- Sick of fake Airtable reviews? Our software experts have spent 357 hours analyzing project management tools. Find out the facts ➤ what makes Airtable tick?
- Notion currently doesn't have an API and therefore can't integrate with other apps through services like Zapier, IFTTT and Integromat. This significantly limits its flexibility and Notion's ability to create complex workflows versus peers (like Evernote, Coda, Airtable and Asana).
- Add your favourite apps to Miro. Improve your team collaboration experience inside Miro.
- Notion Formulas are powerful in their own right, but a true API integration would be a game changer for formulas. And while there are some Notion integrations, may folks still pick Airtable over Notion when they need heavy duty access to automated workflows. Download these formulas into your Notion workspace.
When it comes to migrating your research data to a new repository, there are 2 types of data sets you will need to plan for: Raw data and Research Outcomes.
Raw Data: Is any data point you gathered in order to answer a research question - it could be surveys, interview transcriptions, customer feedback, etc.
Research Outcomes: Are any conclusions or learnings you extracted from your data and analysis. Most teams will share insights via PowerPoint presentations, wiki pages, Google docs, etc.
👉The best way to get started is to turn your research outcomes into Stories.
You can think about stories as mini-blogs that help you capture your learnings and share insights with your team.
For example, let's say you worked on a new version of your personas. You interviewed and visit many customers and after deep analysis, you put all your findings into a presentation with the new version of your personas and you shared it with your team.
In the context of EnjoyHQ, that research work can be turned into a Story by:
- Creating a story.
- Writing a short description of your approach and key takeaways.
- Attaching or embedding the Powerpoint presentation to it.
- You can also embed videos, customer quotes and any other data point that can help increase the impact of your story.
You can label your stories so your team members can filter by topic easily. Your label could be anything from use cases, personas, type of study, vertical, product team, etc.
As you continue to add stories you can start linking those stories to each other. Connecting stories will help you see the relationship between current and previous research outcomes. Connecting insights across all your research will help you build a knowledge graph from your research activity.
Once you have more stories in your account, EnjoyHQ will start suggesting connections based on the content of your stories.
You can see all your stories in the Stories section and read-only users will be able to access them easily.
Once you have turned your research summaries/presentations into Stories you can decide whether or not you want to bring into EnjoyHQ all the raw data you used as part of the analysis behind each story and make it fully searchable.
You can import all your research notes, interview transcriptions, survey responses, etc to EnjoyHQ easily.
You can import files directly into the global search section or to specific research projects. Using the upload icon. Learn more about adding data to your account.
We suggest associating your raw research data to the Stories you created by:
1. Creating a project in EnjoyHQ for each of your studies. Learn more about projects here.
2. Uploading the raw data directly to the respective project inbox.
3. Associating each story to its respective project.
🔎Any data you upload to EnjoyHQ is fully searchable.
Once you have migrated your existing research data and stories you can start using Research Projects to analyze and collaborate on new research questions.
If you are migrating your data from another tool and need help mapping it into EnjoyHQ we will be happy to help any time. Just get in touch via live chat and email (support@getenjoyhq.com) and we'll get back to you right away.
Learn how companies and teams of all sizes use EnjoyHQ 👉Success Stories
Why not book a demo with us? We would love to answer all your questions 👉 Book a demo here
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What is the best tool for implementing an academic database: Airtable, Notion, ClickUp?
Right now, I am using Notion as a database for my academic interests: lists of articles to read, articles do write, journals to publish, etc. ClickUp doesn't offer spreadsheets yet, although it's in the roadmap. I'm considering Airtable specially because I'd like to use Gannt charts.
The easiest way to cite and write is to use Endnote - and it has the added benefit of being able to store PDFs/search any database really. I personally use Evernote to organize and store PDFs and search as well - Evernote has excellent optical character recognition meaning that a simple search will give you results within the PDF + any actual text you have written. I dont think there is a one-size-fits-all approach to academic databases, but 1) project management in notion, 2) PDF management in Evernote, and 3) writing and citing with Endnote + word.
Definitely Roam or MediaWiki.
Both offer a great way to save and list text references. Notion is awesome but lack this feature which seems a staple need in academic content.
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You can check also infinity app. I saw from Producthunt. https://startinfinity.com/
The traditional options for an academic database would likely be a reference and citation tool like Zotero, Endnote, Mendely, and so on. You could definitely build something similar on your own in Notion or other notes and database tools; the difference will be they won't auto-generate standard citations for you once you're ready to publish your findings.
Another tool you could consider here is Coda, which is similar to Notion, and lets you put spreadsheet-style lists in-line inside your notes. Roam Research—with its internal links to connect ideas and outline-style notes—seems something else that could fit.
Curious, how do you want to use Gantt charts to organize research?
Open source tools, web apps, free personal plans on professional software, things that come gratis with your operating system (which, ok, the operating system cost something along with your device ...
I manage events with exhibitors and speakers. We've generally managed the information we need from them, and that which they need from us, with a stream of emails in the year leading up to the even...
Roam Research calls itself 'a note-taking tool for networked thought.' It's built on a graph database, which means it's flat: documents don't live inside of other documents, instead everything coex...
Notion Embed Airtable
Right now, I am using Notion as a database for my academic interests: lists of articles to read, articles do write, journals to publish, etc. ClickUp doesn't offer spreadsheets yet, although it's in the roadmap. I'm considering Airtable specially because I'd like to use Gannt charts.
The easiest way to cite and write is to use Endnote - and it has the added benefit of being able to store PDFs/search any database really. I personally use Evernote to organize and store PDFs and search as well - Evernote has excellent optical character recognition meaning that a simple search will give you results within the PDF + any actual text you have written. I dont think there is a one-size-fits-all approach to academic databases, but 1) project management in notion, 2) PDF management in Evernote, and 3) writing and citing with Endnote + word.
Definitely Roam or MediaWiki.
Both offer a great way to save and list text references. Notion is awesome but lack this feature which seems a staple need in academic content.
Air Table Notion Reviews
You can check also infinity app. I saw from Producthunt. https://startinfinity.com/
The traditional options for an academic database would likely be a reference and citation tool like Zotero, Endnote, Mendely, and so on. You could definitely build something similar on your own in Notion or other notes and database tools; the difference will be they won't auto-generate standard citations for you once you're ready to publish your findings.
Another tool you could consider here is Coda, which is similar to Notion, and lets you put spreadsheet-style lists in-line inside your notes. Roam Research—with its internal links to connect ideas and outline-style notes—seems something else that could fit.
Curious, how do you want to use Gantt charts to organize research?
Open source tools, web apps, free personal plans on professional software, things that come gratis with your operating system (which, ok, the operating system cost something along with your device ...
I manage events with exhibitors and speakers. We've generally managed the information we need from them, and that which they need from us, with a stream of emails in the year leading up to the even...
Roam Research calls itself 'a note-taking tool for networked thought.' It's built on a graph database, which means it's flat: documents don't live inside of other documents, instead everything coex...
Notion Embed Airtable
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