
I built My Bookmark Bot for my personal use. Using Softr, Airtable, and Zapier to build My Bookmark Bot I’m also able to use it on both the Twitter mobile app and web app so no need for extensions. The bot then exports that tweet to a simple webpage interface where I can filter by categories, search and link back to Twitter. To use My Bookmark Bot, I simply reply to the tweet I want bookmarked by tagging and stating the category I want that tweet in. I can organize them in categories, and search by words I remember in the tweet or the username on the tweet. My Bookmark Bot is a tool that helps me export my already bookmarked or newly bookmarked tweets. I decided to create a tool to help with all that. I’m able to do that thanks to Twitter’s bookmark feature, but I probably have thousands of tweets bookmarked! When I remember something I want to refer to, I find myself scrolling endlessly through my bookmarks and most of the time I don’t find what I was looking for. It could be something funny, or helpful, a job opportunity, or an idea I find interesting. One of the things I like to do on Twitter is curate tweets that I think are cool. Today, I’d like to share my latest project with you called ‘ My Bookmark Bot’. After that experience, I became more intrigued with no-code and that’s where my no-code journey began.

The idea never kicked off but I recall having a lot of fun building it. I decided to use this marketplace tool called Yelo to build something similar to DoorDash.

I asked a couple of friends if they felt the same way and, no surprise, they did! I studied at the University of Lagos, and for me one of the most tiring things was trying to get lunch at the restaurants. When you order from DoorDash, your food is delivered by an independent delivery partner). (DoorDash is an on-demand food delivery service that lets you order food and drinks from local restaurants in your area. At first, I would use it as a way to make some of my tasks easier but it became a full on thing when I realized I could use it to build my own DoorDash. My earliest memory of using no-code tools was in my 3rd year at University back in 2018.

As a matter of fact I would say my ambitions at the time were totally different! I wanted to be a Criminal Defense Attorney, but a couple years into the University, I just fell out of love with that and more into something else. I never really started out wanting to build products as a career or use no-code tools. If I could have one superpower, it would be to control time.

When I’m not working, I like to doodle ideas, watch cartoons or true crime documentaries and check for random stuff on the internet. I’ve been exploring the big, bad world of no-code for about 4 years now. I’m a Product Manager, entrepreneur, and no-coder.
