Copper keeps the CRM clean; Fasrad does the follow-up — its own inbox and records, reading the last thread and acting on it.
An agent with its own inbox, calendar, and contact records that reads the last thread and acts on it — not a CRM you still have to drive.
Copper sits inside Gmail and Google Calendar and quietly captures the work you're already doing — every email, meeting, and contact gets pulled into a record without manual entry. For a small team that lives in Google Workspace, that auto-logging is the whole point: the CRM stays current because nobody has to think about it.
But a current record is not the same as a moved deal. Copper tells you a contact has gone quiet, surfaces the next step, and shows you the pipeline. The drafting, the scheduling, the actual reply — still yours. Fasrad starts where that ends. It has its own inbox and its own contact store, so when a lead replies it reads the prior thread, writes the answer that references it, proposes times from your real calendar availability, and logs the interaction the moment it sends.
Where the line falls:
Pick Fasrad if you're a founder or solo operator who wants the follow-up actually written and sent, not just flagged — its own inbox and records, reading the last thread and acting on it.
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Only if your need is follow-up rather than reporting. Copper is a system of record for a Google Workspace sales team — shared contacts, deal stages, dashboards. Fasrad is an agent that keeps its own contact store and actually does the outreach, booking, and logging. Some teams keep Copper for the records and use Fasrad to work the threads.
Copper's CRM sidebar lives inside Gmail, so the records sit next to your mail. Fasrad connects to that same Gmail and reads it too — read-only, so it never marks mail read, moves, or deletes it — and can also run from its own dedicated inbox; either way its browser extension reaches into Gmail for dictation and clipping contacts. The difference isn't where the inbox lives, it's what happens next — Fasrad doesn't just keep the record current, it reads the thread, drafts the reply and sends it as you once you approve, books the call, and logs the interaction itself.
It can. Connect your Gmail and Fasrad reads incoming mail, matches it to the right contact, and logs the interaction — on the new-email trigger, so it happens unattended. Copper's passive capture is its wedge: it files every message and meeting. Fasrad does the capture and then acts on it — drafting the reply, booking the call, moving the stage — rather than only filing it.
Yes. It drafts the reply against the prior thread, sends from its own address, and logs the interaction the moment it goes out. For outreach it runs staggered personalized sends — up to around 100 a day — from a Google Sheet, then triages the responses. The work happens; you approve or steer.
Import them, or clip them on the fly with the browser extension while you're on a page. The agent stores contacts, groups, and interactions in its own datastore, supports bulk updates with undo, and keeps notes with @-mentions and backlinks between records.
$49/month or $490/year — cancel anytime. Setup takes about 4 minutes and it's in public beta — connect Google Calendar and Sheets, give the agent its inbox, and it starts working threads the same day.