The tech stack of a webpage or mobile app is a set of programming languages, frameworks, and tools that developers use to create it. The two base elements of any program are the client-side (front-end) and server-side (back-end). A stack is created by writing every code layer on top of the one before it, creating a stack.
That dataset is your client’s or competitor’s dataset. Its SDKs and APIs for powering the app. Apple and Google don’t exactly make any of this info accessible, and most developers aren’t interested in sharing either, making it terribly difficult to obtain. As a consequence, several developers overlook it when evaluating their customers.
However, knowing your client’s (or your competitor’s) technical school stack is incredibly helpful. As a result, it helps you grasp your client’s level of sophistication, or what services you can provide them based on what they’re operating with. Knowing if an app was developed with native frameworks may offer you insight into whether it’s straightforward to evolve the app, or enable you to supply services tailored to the technologies it uses. And knowing what your competitors have may be a good way for you to strengthen any weakness you would possibly have.
So, how does one get all of this information? By using an API that’ll bring it right to your doorstep. Our favorite is Kazify.
Why Klazify?
Its simple integration allows for it to be added to google spreadsheets without any hassle. However, if you’d rather add it to a website or database, the information comes out of Kazify in JSON data formatting. we love this software because it’s accurate and reliable.
How to use it?
It’s super straightforward to use, simply choose Objects from the options toolbar, and the answer will bring Company and tech information. The Company object returns info regarding the corporate domain and the tech Object returns the list of technologies that the company uses internally and for the domain. This is what the tech stack would look like:
"tech": [ "new_relic", "cloud_flare", "ruby_on_rails", "google_remarketing", "typeform", "google_analytics", "google_tag_manager", "bing_advertiser", "conversio", "atlassian_jira", "rubicon_project", "statcounter", "appnexus", "github", "pubmatic", "trello", "mysql" ] }
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What other features does it have?
Also published on Medium.