![]() It will hold up to 25K contacts, allows you to import 100 business cards per month, and offers real time syncing of contacts. The Premium edition will set you back $9.99 per month (or $99.00 per year). There are two versions of FullContact: Free and Premium. FullContact will pull in publicly available information about a client and automatically add it to the contact. Figure Aįrom within the Settings, you can enrich your contacts. ![]() You can also add multiple address books and import business cards. ![]() The FullContact interface is simple to use and allows you to tag, add notes, edit, and enter information (organization, title, address, phone, etc.). It features a unified contact manager, so you can import contacts from other lists/apps, too. 1: FullContactįullContact ( Figure A), previously called RainMaker, is a web service (currently in beta) that automatically collects your Gmail Contacts. Note: This article is also available as an image gallery. But between Android and web-based apps/services, I have come up with a solid list of five contact managers that work with Google Contacts to bring a bit of power and flexibility to a rather weak entry. Finding third-party contact managers for Google Contacts isn’t easy. How this has been overlooked for so long escapes me - considering how the business landscape lives and dies by its contacts. In fact, the contact manager trapped within Google Docs is so bad, I use it only as a Gmail address book. If you’re a heavy user of Google Apps, you know that the Google Contacts Manager isn’t the greatest tool in an otherwise outstanding toolbox. Luckily, third-party apps are available to give you the power and convenience you need. ![]() Google's contact management tool is pretty lame, especially for business users. ![]() Five apps that leave Google Contacts Manager in the dust ![]()
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