If someone doesn’t have something like this, they’re quite likely either not very seasoned as a developer or else not very inquisitive when it comes to understanding their craft. ![]() I’ll describe the “arsenal” of scratchpads further down. In the examples below that describe a single type of scratchpad, please note that I’m referring to situations where this is the primary or only scratchpad that the developer uses. So, please read the following while bearing in mind the caveat that there will, of course, be exceptions to the ‘rules’ that I’m describing. I’ll say in advance that I’m going to paint with some broad strokes here. In fact, I believe strongly enough in this that I see a lot of value in the interview question “tell me about your scratchpad and how you use it.” This is a very useful practice but, more interestingly for the purposes of this post, I think the makeup of this scratchpad (I’m using this term because it’s what I name mine) can tell you a lot about the developer using it. If you get very used to setting up experiments in this fashion, it tends to be almost as quick as a search, and there’s less potential for wrong or misleading information. And, if they wind up doing this enough times, they start creating a project or project(s) with titles like “dummy”, “scratchpad”, “throwaway”, “junk”, etc - you get the idea.Īs this practice grows and flourishes, it starts to replace google searches and ask a coworker to a degree, even when those things might be quicker. When you have a question like “what exception is thrown when I try to convert a long that is too big to an integer” or “what is the difference in performance between iterating over a list or a dictionary converted to a list” what do you do? Google it? Phone a friend? Open up an instance of your IDE and give it a try? I think that sooner or later, most developers ‘graduate’ to the latter, particularly for things that can’t be answered with a quick search or question of a coworker. Learn more about our approach to data security at /security.Category: Language Agnostic, Uncategorized Tags: Software Engineering, Unit Testing What is a Scratchpad? We also maintain SOC 2 Type 2 compliance. Scratchpad doesn't store your Salesforce data. We built Scratchpad because we believe that sales is a craft revenue teams should be focused on things that matter, like moving deals forward and building customer relationships, not painstakingly updating records in Salesforce. ✨ Create and deploy battle cards, sales playbooks, competitive intel, and pricing to every rep directly in their sales notes.įewer clicks and tools, no stress, more data. ✨ Configure Slack alerts to remind reps to make updates to opportunities missing next steps or with expired close dates. ![]() ✨ Achieve better data hygiene and trust important data is not growing outside of Salesforce in sheets, docs and note apps. ✨ Configure Scratchpad Studio to drive process adherence for sales reps without slowing them down. **RevOps Get Visibility, Control, and Peace of Mind** ✨ Take Salesforce with you and make updates anywhere on the web. ✨ Search across your notes, Salesforce, Gmail, and Calendar all in one place. ![]() ✨ Manage your sales tasks with less clicks. ✨ Fewer clicks to update your Salesforce pipeline. ![]() All the most relevant sales tools reps care about, Notes, Pipeline, Tasks, Search, and more, are just one click away and always connected to Salesforce. Scratchpad super charges the Chrome new tab to give you access to your sales workflow. Bring your sales workflow into the new tab The fastest experience for sales reps to update Salesforce and peace of mind for RevOps.
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