About Asana
Asana allows you to track your team’s work and manage projects clearly and effectively so that your business can stay in sync, hit deadlines, and reach your goals.
About Stripe
Stripe is a SaaS payment management tool. It is built to be an all-in-one payment solution for any business, whether that business offers an on-demand service, traditional product sales, or subscription-based services. Stripe’s tools are designed to help users with a variety of tasks related to running those businesses, including: issuing refunds, processing orders, and managing different subscriptions.
Popular Use Cases
Bring all your Asana data to Amazon Redshift
Load your Asana data to Google BigQuery
ETL all your Asana data to Snowflake
Move your Asana data to MySQL
Bring all your Stripe data to Amazon Redshift
Load your Stripe data to Google BigQuery
ETL all your Stripe data to Snowflake
Move your Stripe data to MySQL
Asana's End Points
Asana Projects
Manage your Asana projects, creating descriptions, setting due dates, tracking progress, and more. This will help you better understand your team’s productivity and your effectiveness over time.
Asana Tasks
If you need an important piece of company-wide information, you can search among all tasks in all accounts. This can help you extract big-picture project insights with just a few clicks, allowing you to prepare your data for analytics.
Asana Tags
Use these tags to track specific data or understand your progress, monitoring by things like workspace ID, tag notes, and more. This will allow for better, more detailed organizational structures.
Asana Stories
A story represents an activity associated with an object in the Asana system. Tracking stories can help you understand your team’s progress, their interactions, and any pain points that they may be experiencing. Use this information to increase things like efficiency and employee satisfaction.
Asana Teams
Control and understand the teams within your organization, then use these records for big-picture insights."
Stripe's End Points
Stripe Charges
Retrieve data from all your customer transactions, which provides basic details about the customer, such as their name, address, and email, in addition to data about the charge itself, such as if it was accepted, disputed, refunded, etc.
Stripe Customers
View or create data about new and existing customers, which allows you to track recurring charges, subscriptions, and multiple purchases. This can, in turn, help you to monitor a customer’s transaction history throughout their lifecycle with your company.
Stripe Events
Retrieve any automatically recorded event that occurs on your account, whether it’s a charge, subscription, failed invoice payment, or anything else of note. This allows you to have current, up-to-date data about what is happening on your account at any given moment.
Stripe Invoices
Monitor an invoice, which is created as part of a recurring payment on Stripe. This returns data on the charged amount, whether the invoice was successful, how many attempts the invoice has made to collect the money, and which subscriptions are linked to that invoice, if applicable.
Stripe Plans
Collect data on different subscription plans that you have, which includes the cost of the plan, how and when it is billed, and the plan’s trial period. You can then integrate the plan data with your subscription or customer data to get a deeper view of the sales performance of various plans.
Stripe Subscriptions
Track which clients are subscribed to which plans, as well as when they subscribed, when they canceled, and how many users they are subscribed with. This field also allows you to track charges associated with those subscriptions so that you can monitor the revenue they generate.