ZeroWork
If you’ve ever found yourself doing the same online task over and over – copying data from websites, sending messages, clicking through forms – you’ve probably wondered if there’s a way to make it stop. ZeroWork is built around that exact feeling. It’s a browser-based tool that helps you automate repetitive tasks without writing any code. You don’t need to be a developer or learn a scripting language. You just record what you’re doing, and ZeroWork turns it into a bot that can repeat the process for you.
I first tried ZeroWork while helping a friend who runs a small e-commerce shop. She spends hours each week scraping product data from supplier websites – names, prices, descriptions – and pasting it into her inventory system. It’s boring, time-consuming, and easy to mess up. We opened ZeroWork, recorded her workflow once, and then let the bot run through the rest. It felt like handing off a chore to someone who doesn’t mind doing it perfectly every time.
The setup is surprisingly simple. You install the browser extension, hit record, and go through your task like you normally would. ZeroWork watches what you do – clicks, scrolls, form entries – and builds a bot that can repeat it. You can tweak the steps afterward if needed, but most of the time, it gets things right on the first try. I used it to automate a lead generation task where I had to visit a list of LinkedIn profiles, grab job titles, and save them to a spreadsheet. What used to take me an hour now takes five minutes.
One thing I really appreciate is how flexible the bots are. You can run them manually or schedule them to run at certain times. You can also share them with others, which is great if you’re working in a team or want to sell your bots to people who have the same problem. There’s even a marketplace where you can browse bots built by other users – some for free, some paid. I found one that scrapes Instagram bios and follower counts, and it worked right out of the box.
ZeroWork isn’t trying to be a full automation platform. It’s more like a toolkit for people who want to save time on tedious web tasks. It’s especially useful if you’re doing freelance work, running a small business, or managing social media accounts. I’ve used it to automate outreach messages, scrape data from job boards, and even clean up email lists. Each time, it’s saved me from doing something I didn’t want to do manually.
You can explore it at ZeroWork’s homepage and see how it fits into your routine. Whether you’re trying to speed up your workflow, reduce human error, or just reclaim a few hours of your week, it’s a quiet little tool that makes repetitive tasks feel less like a burden. It doesn’t try to take over your job – it just helps you skip the parts that feel like busywork. And honestly, that’s a pretty good deal.
