Gojiberry feeds you signal-based leads. Fasrad finds the buyers, writes the email, sends from your inbox, answers replies, and books the meeting — one agent.
Tell it who you sell to. It finds the buyers on the live web, emails them from your inbox, works every reply, and books the meetings — one agent, the whole pipeline.
Gojiberry's pitch is clean: enter your website, and an agent learns what you sell, watches social signals — who engaged with a competitor, who followed your company, who's active in your space — scores those people against your ideal customer, and messages them. The Pro plan runs $99 a month per seat for two agents and up to 1,800 prospects contacted a month, with a custom plan once your team hits five.
The limit is the shape of the signal. Social activity catches buyers who are loud online — it says nothing about the company that just raised, posted three ops roles, or shipped a product that makes them need you this quarter. And once Gojiberry has sent the message, the job it was hired for is over: replies land pre-drafted in a unified inbox, and the meeting, the CRM, and everything after are still yours to run.
Fasrad starts earlier and finishes later. Tell the agent who you sell to, and it researches buyers across the live web — funding announcements, careers pages, press, directories, review sites — and writes each one into your Google Sheet and its built-in CRM with a why-now note and a source. Then it writes a per-contact opener from that research, sends staggered from your own connected inbox, and stays on the thread: triaging replies, answering the routine ones, offering calendar slots, and logging every outcome.
What each one does:
And because Fasrad is a general agent rather than a prospecting seat, the same agent that fills your pipeline also runs your inbox, your calendar, your research, and your reports. One agent, the whole job — not another per-seat subscription in the stack.
These pages cover the adjacent jobs buyers usually compare before choosing an AI agent.
Yes — from a wider field. Tell it your ideal customer in plain language and it researches the live web: funding announcements, careers pages, directories, press, review sites. Every company that fits lands in your Google Sheet and the built-in CRM with a contact, a why-now note, and the source it found.
That's a standing job, not a one-off. The agent runs scheduled sweeps and page monitors for the signals that matter to your offer — a funding round, a hiring spree, a product launch, a pricing change — and new signals become new rows in your list. It's a wider net than who engaged with a post, because most buyers never announce themselves on social.
Export your prospects to CSV and paste them into a Google Sheet — the agent picks up your list alongside the new leads it finds. Connect the inbox you want to send from, tell it the offer and the tone, and you're live in about four minutes. There are no sequences to rebuild because there are none to build.
Your own connected inbox. It sends staggered through the day, capped near 100, so the volume reads human and every thread lives where you already work. Prospects reply to you, at your address, and the agent is watching that inbox when they do.
The agent reads it and acts. Routine questions get answered from what you've told it, interested prospects get real calendar slots offered in-thread, brush-offs get logged, and unsubscribes are honored immediately. Follow-ups fire only on silence and stop the moment anyone writes back. Every touch lands in the CRM.
$49/month or $490/year — cancel anytime It's in public beta. One agent covers lead research, signal watching, outreach, reply handling, booking, and CRM in a single seat — instead of a per-seat prospecting subscription that stops at the send.