About Basecamp
Basecamp consolidates many project management systems into one centralized location that includes to-do lists, shared documents, schedules and discussions. In the Basecamp interface, users can see what tasks need to be accomplished, who they are assigned to and when they are due. They can also access public documents and discussion boards. This allows for more organized communication and more efficient and comprehensive teamwork.
About Contentful
Bringing love back into content management: Contentful is an API-first CMS focused on the simplicity of development. Manage structured content in websites and apps.
Popular Use Cases
Bring all your Basecamp data to Amazon Redshift
Load your Basecamp data to Google BigQuery
ETL all your Basecamp data to Snowflake
Move your Basecamp data to MySQL
Bring all your Contentful data to Amazon Redshift
Load your Contentful data to Google BigQuery
ETL all your Contentful data to Snowflake
Move your Contentful data to MySQL
Basecamp's End Points
Basecamp Projects
Get data about a project, including its name, status, and the list of tools enabled for that project (schedules, to-do’s, and message boards, for example). You can also use this endpoint to modify existing projects that need additional functionality or to trash projects that are no longer being worked on.
Basecamp To-do
Retrieve information about a to-do task, such as its name, status, creator and assignee. Then, look at important information about your tasks such as what tasks a person has assigned to them, what tasks are still active and how long those tasks have been active. This can help you measure project performance and other key metrics.
Basecamp Events
Track any time a change occurs in Basecamp i.e. if there is a new comment, an assigned to-do, a new document, or any number of other events. This data can help you highlight trends, run analytics, and support any other data sources that rely on event reporting.
Basecamp Comments
Get information about any comment made in Basecamp, including the name of the commenter, the date the comment was made, the content of the comment, and what project the comment was on. This data can help you both monitor user engagement and gauge which projects are being talked about the most.