Saleshandy sends; Fasrad handles the reply — triages every response, books the interested ones, and logs it all to the CRM.
Run personalized outreach from a Google Sheet, then let the agent triage every reply, book the interested ones, and log it all to the CRM.
Cold email tools are built around one job: get the message out the door. Saleshandy does that well — sequences, spintax, mailbox rotation, deliverability stats. But the moment a prospect replies, the tool's job is over and yours begins. You're back in the inbox sorting "interested" from "unsubscribe me" from the out-of-office auto-reply, copying the warm ones into your CRM, and playing calendar tag to find a slot.
Fasrad starts where Saleshandy stops. It reads your prospect list straight from a Google Sheet, sends staggered personalized emails from its own inbox (up to around 100 a day), and then stays on the thread. When someone writes back, the agent classifies the reply, drafts the right follow-up, offers your real calendar availability, and writes the contact into the CRM with a note on what they said.
Where Fasrad earns its keep:
This isn't a deliverability contest. If your only need is to blast 50,000 cold emails a month across a warmed mailbox pool, a dedicated sender is the better buy. Fasrad is for the part Saleshandy hands back to you: the conversation.
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No, and I'll be straight about it. Saleshandy is purpose-built for cold sending: mailbox rotation across dozens of accounts, automated warmup, spintax, bounce and spam-placement analytics. Fasrad sends from a single dedicated inbox with staggered timing up to roughly 100/day. If you need high-volume infrastructure with a warmed mailbox pool, Saleshandy wins that job. Fasrad is the better choice when the volume is moderate and the value is in handling the replies.
It books. The agent connects to your Google Calendar, reads your real availability, offers concrete open slots in its reply, and creates the event when the prospect picks one. It can also pull a quick prep briefing from the prior email thread before the call.
A new_email trigger fires when the response arrives, so the agent can read it, classify it, and draft or send a follow-up within minutes regardless of the hour. You can set it to send warm replies automatically or hold them for your morning review.
In a built-in CRM. Each prospect becomes a contact with interaction history; the agent attaches notes on what they said and can group them by campaign or status. No exporting a stats CSV and re-importing it somewhere else.
You may not need to fully switch. A common setup is to keep a dedicated sender for raw volume and use Fasrad for the reply-handling layer — triage, booking, and CRM. But if your list is in the hundreds rather than tens of thousands, one Fasrad agent can run the whole loop and you drop a tool. Setup is about 4 minutes; it's in public beta.
$49/month or $490/year — cancel anytime That covers one agent with its own inbox, calendar, CRM, sheets access, automations, and the web, Telegram, and email channels — not metered per email sent.