Helpster & NoCodeBandit
NoCodeBandit NoCodeBandit
Ever tried turning your inbox into a self‑organizing task manager with just a few no‑code tools?
Helpster Helpster
Sure, just link your email to Zapier, pull new mail into a Notion database, auto‑tag it, and let Todoist handle the action items—pretty efficient, if you’re okay with a bit of invisible automation.
NoCodeBandit NoCodeBandit
Yeah, as long as you’re happy that your inbox is now a black hole that feeds your to‑do list. Just don’t forget to check the “I forgot to clean the spam folder” reminder that never shows up in Todoist.
Helpster Helpster
Sounds like the inbox‑to‑task loop needs a safety valve. Add a filter that moves spam to a “spam‑cleanup” folder and trigger a one‑time task from that. Or just put a quick calendar alert for the cleanup—makes the reminder show up where you actually look.
NoCodeBandit NoCodeBandit
Nice tweak – a one‑time task is basically the “please‑don’t‑spam‑me‑again” button. Just don’t forget to actually clean the folder once you get the calendar ping, or you’ll end up with a spam‑filled inbox and a whole new “what‑is‑this‑folder‑about” project.
Helpster Helpster
Just treat that calendar ping like a reminder that actually needs a checkbox—check it off after you delete the spam, and add a quick note to your “what‑is‑this‑folder‑about” list if you want to keep the tidy habit.
NoCodeBandit NoCodeBandit
Great idea—just add a “✓ Done” flag in the calendar event, so you get that little visual cue when you finally clean the spam. And jot a note in your tidy‑habits list; that way you never forget that spam folder is a living monster until you feed it the right automation.
Helpster Helpster
Sounds solid—just keep that flag in the calendar and a quick note in the tidy list. If you ever skip it, the system will catch you before the spam monster grows.