EDITORIAL

500 Global Founders Retreat

November 29, 2024

Q. How did you attend the 500 Global Founders Retreat if you’re not a 500 portfolio company?

Originally, this program started as a workshop for 500’s portfolio companies. However, in this recent event, companies recommended by organizations such as Smilegate Investment, Asan Nanum Foundation, and the Global Startup Academy were also invited to participate. We got our spot thanks to a recommendation from Smilegate Investment. Before going, at an orientation from 500, someone said something that really stuck with me:

“During your time here, we’ll consider you part of our portfolio and do our best to help you. We hope everyone can hang out, not just as investors and startups. You can completely let go—go ahead and dye your hair pink if you want.”

In the current tough investment scene, I’d never heard such welcoming words from someone who isn’t even our own investor.

Q. Roughly, what did the overall program look like?

From November 5 to 14, it ran for ten days. There was a weekend in between, but the weekend was left free (Day OFF) so participants could catch up on work or rest. On the other days, sessions ran from morning till evening. I don’t know if it was intentional, but the program felt like it was split into two major themes: In the first week, sessions mostly focused on explosive startup growth, while the second week covered wellness for creating a sustainable startup. Initially, I wasn’t sure whether the second week’s material would be relevant to me, but by the end, I realized that if only one of those two themes had been covered, the core values of the program wouldn’t have come through. The second week turned out to be extremely valuable.

Q. Were accommodation or flights covered?

No, each company had to book and pay for its own lodging and airfare. That meant everyone flew in on different flights and stayed in different places. In our case, a founder we knew generously lent us a house, so we didn’t have to worry about accommodations. Most sessions were held near Palo Alto, while our lodging was in San Francisco, so we spent two hours commuting by rental car every day (infinite thanks to our best driver, Youngbeom!). We did consider Uber, but it was too expensive, so we decided to rent a car. In the beginning, the thought of commuting for so long made me nervous. But as they say, life can be unexpected in a good way: we used the large SUV we rented to carpool with other founders who lived nearby and ended up forming strong friendships during our daily rides. Meeting them turned out to be one of our biggest strokes of luck on this trip.

Q. Can you share more about the daily schedule?

Day 0 (Nov 4): Arrived in San Francisco.

Day 1 (Nov 5): Session with Sol Eun, founder of Vertical Bar (previously exited a YC startup). After that, there were 1:1 “Deep Dive” sessions with each company. The most memorable moment was talking to our session lead, Sean, who asked probing questions that highlighted how to communicate so that people on the other side would genuinely want to listen and respond. Even though our company has been incorporated for four years, it felt like we were learning all over again how to talk about who we are and what we do from scratch.

Day 2 (Nov 6): In the morning, Andrew and Kris from Darwinian Ventures talked about B2B sales and digital marketing. Their practical advice was good, but two quotes stood out for me:

“If you don’t define yourself, others will do it for you.”
“Every choice you make in life either builds trust or breaks it.”

The most memorable part of the day was the Founders Forum in the late afternoon. Initially, I didn’t know what it would involve. We split into three groups, drew personal “life graphs,” and shared our life stories. I wondered how honest everyone could be in a business-like setting, but thanks to a rule of “whatever is said here, stays here,” everyone spoke quite frankly, and others listened quietly. This session turned us from mere acquaintances on a business trip into genuine friends, open with one another.

Day 3 (Nov 7): In the morning, Peter from 500 Korea (founder of Querypie, YC W20) explained how to analyze the broader startup market, highlighting common mistakes many startups make. Then came a session from Jina Kim, who handled CS/X at companies like Amazon and Apple, and a session from Kyong Han on the mindset and attributes of successful startups. After lunch, we heard from Chuck (ex-U.S. Navy special forces and now a founder) and from Marcelo, cofounder of Remote. That evening, there was a Winter Mixture networking party by 500 Japan, which we didn’t attend.

Day 4 (Nov 8): In the morning, we visited the headquarters of Carta (sort of like Korea’s QuotaBook). In the afternoon, we joined a networking event at Google’s San Francisco office.

Day 5 (Nov 9): Day OFF. We’d been surviving on 2-3 hours of sleep for four days, so we finally caught up on rest.

Day 6 (Nov 10): Day OFF. Had a lunch coffee chat with Se-young Lee, CEO of WRTN.

Day 7 (Nov 11, Veterans Day): Went hiking in Huddart Park. Afterwards, the 500 Korea team invited us to their Airbnb, where we shared dinner and wine.

Day 8 (Nov 12): Visited Notion’s HQ for a session. Surprisingly, the office was in a warehouse-like area that gave off a vibe akin to a renovated warehouse-cafe in Seoul’s Seongsu district. (Short Notion video) Then we headed to Stripe, had lunch at the Stripe cafeteria (Tuesday is taco day—really fresh and tasty). We had time to tour the office before the next session. Stripe’s office was one of the most creative workspaces I’ve seen. (Short Stripe office video)

Day 9 (Nov 13): For two days, sessions were held in a stunning three-story cabin in the Woodsides forest. The first session was “Start Up Yourself” by Miru Kim, who worked at Apple, MS, and Meta, and recently launched a wellness coaching startup. In the afternoon, there was a Final Graduation IR Pitch Contest with Silicon Valley investors, and among many strong contenders, we (Walla) placed 2nd!

Day 10 (Nov 14): From morning until evening, we attended sessions led by coach Jenny Huang on mental training and emotional resilience. That evening, everything wrapped up with a Farewell Dinner.

Q. What did you gain from this experience?

This retreat was literally a chance to “retreat”—to step back and reflect on how far we’ve come. During entrepreneurship, what you need most and seldom find is the space to pause and see the bigger picture. In the startup world, we’re typically convinced we must have unwavering faith in our product and constantly try to persuade customers and investors. Many startup workshops support that mindset by telling you “You’re doing great! Keep pushing forward!”—which provides a needed boost of courage. But here, it was different. Instead of reassuring us, they asked, “Are you really on the right path? Maybe it’s time to rethink from the very beginning.” They even taught us to breathe, to pitch our product from scratch, to reintroduce our company—stuff we thought we already knew well. Doubt can eat away at you, but this type of guiding push, rooted in trust, helped us rediscover what we’d been missing and come back to deliver two or three times our normal performance.

Q. Any final words?

It’s not a one-size-fits-all program for every sector and every stage. However, for my cofounder and me, each 10-minute break between sessions sparked a flood of new insights that led us to excitedly imagine our future. Despite the extreme schedule and lack of sleep, the sessions left a lasting impression. Spending time with people other than our own team let me rediscover my personal strengths, warmth, and an endless capacity for gleaning insights. If you’ve read this far, I hope you’ll find the same kind of luck at your next retreat.

Q. How did you attend the 500 Global Founders Retreat if you’re not a 500 portfolio company?

Originally, this program started as a workshop for 500’s portfolio companies. However, in this recent event, companies recommended by organizations such as Smilegate Investment, Asan Nanum Foundation, and the Global Startup Academy were also invited to participate. We got our spot thanks to a recommendation from Smilegate Investment. Before going, at an orientation from 500, someone said something that really stuck with me:

“During your time here, we’ll consider you part of our portfolio and do our best to help you. We hope everyone can hang out, not just as investors and startups. You can completely let go—go ahead and dye your hair pink if you want.”

In the current tough investment scene, I’d never heard such welcoming words from someone who isn’t even our own investor.

Q. Roughly, what did the overall program look like?

From November 5 to 14, it ran for ten days. There was a weekend in between, but the weekend was left free (Day OFF) so participants could catch up on work or rest. On the other days, sessions ran from morning till evening. I don’t know if it was intentional, but the program felt like it was split into two major themes: In the first week, sessions mostly focused on explosive startup growth, while the second week covered wellness for creating a sustainable startup. Initially, I wasn’t sure whether the second week’s material would be relevant to me, but by the end, I realized that if only one of those two themes had been covered, the core values of the program wouldn’t have come through. The second week turned out to be extremely valuable.

Q. Were accommodation or flights covered?

No, each company had to book and pay for its own lodging and airfare. That meant everyone flew in on different flights and stayed in different places. In our case, a founder we knew generously lent us a house, so we didn’t have to worry about accommodations. Most sessions were held near Palo Alto, while our lodging was in San Francisco, so we spent two hours commuting by rental car every day (infinite thanks to our best driver, Youngbeom!). We did consider Uber, but it was too expensive, so we decided to rent a car. In the beginning, the thought of commuting for so long made me nervous. But as they say, life can be unexpected in a good way: we used the large SUV we rented to carpool with other founders who lived nearby and ended up forming strong friendships during our daily rides. Meeting them turned out to be one of our biggest strokes of luck on this trip.

Q. Can you share more about the daily schedule?

Day 0 (Nov 4): Arrived in San Francisco.

Day 1 (Nov 5): Session with Sol Eun, founder of Vertical Bar (previously exited a YC startup). After that, there were 1:1 “Deep Dive” sessions with each company. The most memorable moment was talking to our session lead, Sean, who asked probing questions that highlighted how to communicate so that people on the other side would genuinely want to listen and respond. Even though our company has been incorporated for four years, it felt like we were learning all over again how to talk about who we are and what we do from scratch.

Day 2 (Nov 6): In the morning, Andrew and Kris from Darwinian Ventures talked about B2B sales and digital marketing. Their practical advice was good, but two quotes stood out for me:

“If you don’t define yourself, others will do it for you.”
“Every choice you make in life either builds trust or breaks it.”

The most memorable part of the day was the Founders Forum in the late afternoon. Initially, I didn’t know what it would involve. We split into three groups, drew personal “life graphs,” and shared our life stories. I wondered how honest everyone could be in a business-like setting, but thanks to a rule of “whatever is said here, stays here,” everyone spoke quite frankly, and others listened quietly. This session turned us from mere acquaintances on a business trip into genuine friends, open with one another.

Day 3 (Nov 7): In the morning, Peter from 500 Korea (founder of Querypie, YC W20) explained how to analyze the broader startup market, highlighting common mistakes many startups make. Then came a session from Jina Kim, who handled CS/X at companies like Amazon and Apple, and a session from Kyong Han on the mindset and attributes of successful startups. After lunch, we heard from Chuck (ex-U.S. Navy special forces and now a founder) and from Marcelo, cofounder of Remote. That evening, there was a Winter Mixture networking party by 500 Japan, which we didn’t attend.

Day 4 (Nov 8): In the morning, we visited the headquarters of Carta (sort of like Korea’s QuotaBook). In the afternoon, we joined a networking event at Google’s San Francisco office.

Day 5 (Nov 9): Day OFF. We’d been surviving on 2-3 hours of sleep for four days, so we finally caught up on rest.

Day 6 (Nov 10): Day OFF. Had a lunch coffee chat with Se-young Lee, CEO of WRTN.

Day 7 (Nov 11, Veterans Day): Went hiking in Huddart Park. Afterwards, the 500 Korea team invited us to their Airbnb, where we shared dinner and wine.

Day 8 (Nov 12): Visited Notion’s HQ for a session. Surprisingly, the office was in a warehouse-like area that gave off a vibe akin to a renovated warehouse-cafe in Seoul’s Seongsu district. (Short Notion video) Then we headed to Stripe, had lunch at the Stripe cafeteria (Tuesday is taco day—really fresh and tasty). We had time to tour the office before the next session. Stripe’s office was one of the most creative workspaces I’ve seen. (Short Stripe office video)

Day 9 (Nov 13): For two days, sessions were held in a stunning three-story cabin in the Woodsides forest. The first session was “Start Up Yourself” by Miru Kim, who worked at Apple, MS, and Meta, and recently launched a wellness coaching startup. In the afternoon, there was a Final Graduation IR Pitch Contest with Silicon Valley investors, and among many strong contenders, we (Walla) placed 2nd!

Day 10 (Nov 14): From morning until evening, we attended sessions led by coach Jenny Huang on mental training and emotional resilience. That evening, everything wrapped up with a Farewell Dinner.

Q. What did you gain from this experience?

This retreat was literally a chance to “retreat”—to step back and reflect on how far we’ve come. During entrepreneurship, what you need most and seldom find is the space to pause and see the bigger picture. In the startup world, we’re typically convinced we must have unwavering faith in our product and constantly try to persuade customers and investors. Many startup workshops support that mindset by telling you “You’re doing great! Keep pushing forward!”—which provides a needed boost of courage. But here, it was different. Instead of reassuring us, they asked, “Are you really on the right path? Maybe it’s time to rethink from the very beginning.” They even taught us to breathe, to pitch our product from scratch, to reintroduce our company—stuff we thought we already knew well. Doubt can eat away at you, but this type of guiding push, rooted in trust, helped us rediscover what we’d been missing and come back to deliver two or three times our normal performance.

Q. Any final words?

It’s not a one-size-fits-all program for every sector and every stage. However, for my cofounder and me, each 10-minute break between sessions sparked a flood of new insights that led us to excitedly imagine our future. Despite the extreme schedule and lack of sleep, the sessions left a lasting impression. Spending time with people other than our own team let me rediscover my personal strengths, warmth, and an endless capacity for gleaning insights. If you’ve read this far, I hope you’ll find the same kind of luck at your next retreat.

Q. How did you attend the 500 Global Founders Retreat if you’re not a 500 portfolio company?

Originally, this program started as a workshop for 500’s portfolio companies. However, in this recent event, companies recommended by organizations such as Smilegate Investment, Asan Nanum Foundation, and the Global Startup Academy were also invited to participate. We got our spot thanks to a recommendation from Smilegate Investment. Before going, at an orientation from 500, someone said something that really stuck with me:

“During your time here, we’ll consider you part of our portfolio and do our best to help you. We hope everyone can hang out, not just as investors and startups. You can completely let go—go ahead and dye your hair pink if you want.”

In the current tough investment scene, I’d never heard such welcoming words from someone who isn’t even our own investor.

Q. Roughly, what did the overall program look like?

From November 5 to 14, it ran for ten days. There was a weekend in between, but the weekend was left free (Day OFF) so participants could catch up on work or rest. On the other days, sessions ran from morning till evening. I don’t know if it was intentional, but the program felt like it was split into two major themes: In the first week, sessions mostly focused on explosive startup growth, while the second week covered wellness for creating a sustainable startup. Initially, I wasn’t sure whether the second week’s material would be relevant to me, but by the end, I realized that if only one of those two themes had been covered, the core values of the program wouldn’t have come through. The second week turned out to be extremely valuable.

Q. Were accommodation or flights covered?

No, each company had to book and pay for its own lodging and airfare. That meant everyone flew in on different flights and stayed in different places. In our case, a founder we knew generously lent us a house, so we didn’t have to worry about accommodations. Most sessions were held near Palo Alto, while our lodging was in San Francisco, so we spent two hours commuting by rental car every day (infinite thanks to our best driver, Youngbeom!). We did consider Uber, but it was too expensive, so we decided to rent a car. In the beginning, the thought of commuting for so long made me nervous. But as they say, life can be unexpected in a good way: we used the large SUV we rented to carpool with other founders who lived nearby and ended up forming strong friendships during our daily rides. Meeting them turned out to be one of our biggest strokes of luck on this trip.

Q. Can you share more about the daily schedule?

Day 0 (Nov 4): Arrived in San Francisco.

Day 1 (Nov 5): Session with Sol Eun, founder of Vertical Bar (previously exited a YC startup). After that, there were 1:1 “Deep Dive” sessions with each company. The most memorable moment was talking to our session lead, Sean, who asked probing questions that highlighted how to communicate so that people on the other side would genuinely want to listen and respond. Even though our company has been incorporated for four years, it felt like we were learning all over again how to talk about who we are and what we do from scratch.

Day 2 (Nov 6): In the morning, Andrew and Kris from Darwinian Ventures talked about B2B sales and digital marketing. Their practical advice was good, but two quotes stood out for me:

“If you don’t define yourself, others will do it for you.”
“Every choice you make in life either builds trust or breaks it.”

The most memorable part of the day was the Founders Forum in the late afternoon. Initially, I didn’t know what it would involve. We split into three groups, drew personal “life graphs,” and shared our life stories. I wondered how honest everyone could be in a business-like setting, but thanks to a rule of “whatever is said here, stays here,” everyone spoke quite frankly, and others listened quietly. This session turned us from mere acquaintances on a business trip into genuine friends, open with one another.

Day 3 (Nov 7): In the morning, Peter from 500 Korea (founder of Querypie, YC W20) explained how to analyze the broader startup market, highlighting common mistakes many startups make. Then came a session from Jina Kim, who handled CS/X at companies like Amazon and Apple, and a session from Kyong Han on the mindset and attributes of successful startups. After lunch, we heard from Chuck (ex-U.S. Navy special forces and now a founder) and from Marcelo, cofounder of Remote. That evening, there was a Winter Mixture networking party by 500 Japan, which we didn’t attend.

Day 4 (Nov 8): In the morning, we visited the headquarters of Carta (sort of like Korea’s QuotaBook). In the afternoon, we joined a networking event at Google’s San Francisco office.

Day 5 (Nov 9): Day OFF. We’d been surviving on 2-3 hours of sleep for four days, so we finally caught up on rest.

Day 6 (Nov 10): Day OFF. Had a lunch coffee chat with Se-young Lee, CEO of WRTN.

Day 7 (Nov 11, Veterans Day): Went hiking in Huddart Park. Afterwards, the 500 Korea team invited us to their Airbnb, where we shared dinner and wine.

Day 8 (Nov 12): Visited Notion’s HQ for a session. Surprisingly, the office was in a warehouse-like area that gave off a vibe akin to a renovated warehouse-cafe in Seoul’s Seongsu district. (Short Notion video) Then we headed to Stripe, had lunch at the Stripe cafeteria (Tuesday is taco day—really fresh and tasty). We had time to tour the office before the next session. Stripe’s office was one of the most creative workspaces I’ve seen. (Short Stripe office video)

Day 9 (Nov 13): For two days, sessions were held in a stunning three-story cabin in the Woodsides forest. The first session was “Start Up Yourself” by Miru Kim, who worked at Apple, MS, and Meta, and recently launched a wellness coaching startup. In the afternoon, there was a Final Graduation IR Pitch Contest with Silicon Valley investors, and among many strong contenders, we (Walla) placed 2nd!

Day 10 (Nov 14): From morning until evening, we attended sessions led by coach Jenny Huang on mental training and emotional resilience. That evening, everything wrapped up with a Farewell Dinner.

Q. What did you gain from this experience?

This retreat was literally a chance to “retreat”—to step back and reflect on how far we’ve come. During entrepreneurship, what you need most and seldom find is the space to pause and see the bigger picture. In the startup world, we’re typically convinced we must have unwavering faith in our product and constantly try to persuade customers and investors. Many startup workshops support that mindset by telling you “You’re doing great! Keep pushing forward!”—which provides a needed boost of courage. But here, it was different. Instead of reassuring us, they asked, “Are you really on the right path? Maybe it’s time to rethink from the very beginning.” They even taught us to breathe, to pitch our product from scratch, to reintroduce our company—stuff we thought we already knew well. Doubt can eat away at you, but this type of guiding push, rooted in trust, helped us rediscover what we’d been missing and come back to deliver two or three times our normal performance.

Q. Any final words?

It’s not a one-size-fits-all program for every sector and every stage. However, for my cofounder and me, each 10-minute break between sessions sparked a flood of new insights that led us to excitedly imagine our future. Despite the extreme schedule and lack of sleep, the sessions left a lasting impression. Spending time with people other than our own team let me rediscover my personal strengths, warmth, and an endless capacity for gleaning insights. If you’ve read this far, I hope you’ll find the same kind of luck at your next retreat.

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January 29, 2024

EDITORIAL
To Someone Who Has Been Staring at Data for 10 Hours

January 23, 2024

EDITORIAL
The Secret to Acquiring 30,000 Users with Minimal Marketing Budget

November 29, 2023

EDITORIAL
Paprikan's Open Hiring Journey

November 28, 2023

GUIDES
Survey Form Webhook Guidelines

August 31, 2023

EDITORIAL
Starting a Company and Living Together in Canada

June 12, 2023

GUIDES
Let's Group Data Using the Group By Feature

May 17, 2023

EDITORIAL
The Tiny History of Walla

May 15, 2023

EDITORIAL
Insights from Walla Team's Remarkable 220x Revenue Growth in Just 6 Months

April 28, 2023

EDITORIAL
Insights from a Walla Team Co-founder Shared in a University Lecture

April 5, 2023

GUIDES
How to Create a One-Page Survey

April 5, 2023

GUIDES
How to Set Up Notifications for Surveys

April 5, 2023

EDITORIAL
A Letter to Aspiring Entrepreneurs

March 29, 2023

EDITORIAL
Why Walla Became Walla: The Story Behind the Name

March 21, 2023

GUIDES
The Perfect Way to Collect Location Data

March 15, 2023

GUIDES
Fully Understand Logic Setting

March 14, 2023

GUIDES
Exploring Walla Team's Philosophy Behind Pricing

March 14, 2023

Silhouette of woman wearing black hat and black coat
GUIDES
Analyzing Response Sheet Data with GPT

March 8, 2023

Lightbulb
GUIDES
The Most Efficient Way to Use Google Forms

March 8, 2023

GUIDES
Hidden Fields: How to Stop Hiding and Start Using

March 8, 2023

EDITORIAL
Hello, It's Team Walla.

March 10, 2023

EDITORIAL
Why is it called Paprika Data Lab?

March 10, 2023

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EDITORIAL
Run a Successful Online Promotion with Walla

March 28, 2025

EDITORIAL
Create a Survey in 5 Minutes Using Walla Templates

March 26, 2025

EDITORIAL
Online Event Marketing? Do It All with Just One Survey!

March 21, 2025

EDITORIAL
How to Stay One Step Ahead in B2B Marketing

March 19, 2025

EDITORIAL
Google Forms feels too basic, SurveyMonkey too pricey?

March 14, 2025

EDITORIAL
Perfecting BTL Marketing with Satisfaction Surveys

March 12, 2025

EDITORIAL
Free Marketing Guide for Startups

March 7, 2025

EDITORIAL
Creating Surveys That Elevate Customer Experience (CX)

March 5, 2025

EDITORIAL
Why Walla Is Essential for CRM Analysis

February 21, 2025

EDITORIAL
Ever seen a form like this? A collection of fun and quirky test cases

February 19, 2025

EDITORIAL
Practical Applications of CX, BX, and UX That Professionals Shouldn’t Overlook

February 12, 2025

EDITORIAL
Creating More Aesthetic and Emotionally Engaging Survey Forms with Walla

February 12, 2025

EDITORIAL
A Simple Walla Guide to Measuring Customer Satisfaction and NPS

February 5, 2025

EDITORIAL
Brand Redesign: How to Start with Data

January 31, 2025

EDITORIAL
Comparison of the 4 Major Survey Forms: Naver Form, Typeform, SurveyMonkey, Walla

January 22, 2025

EDITORIAL
A Recent Marketing Research Case Report

January 16, 2025

EDITORIAL
An Overview of the CXO Roadmap through Feedback Analysis

January 9, 2025

EDITORIAL
Boost Customer Loyalty: How Regular Surveys Drive Better Service and Stronger Brands

December 27, 2024

EDITORIAL
Elevate Your Brand: How Surveys Fuel Awareness and Positive Perception

December 18, 2024

EDITORIAL
Building User-Centric Products: How to Leverage Surveys for Effective Market Insights

December 11, 2024

EDITORIAL
Boost Your Workflow: Connect Walla to Discord, Slack, and More with Ease

December 9, 2024

EDITORIAL
Customer Feedback Management: How South Korea’s Top Brands Drive Growth Through CFM

December 6, 2024

EDITORIAL
500 Global Founders Retreat

November 29, 2024

EDITORIAL
Elevating Brand Experience: Why BX Management Defines Market Success

November 27, 2024

EDITORIAL
Crafting High-Impact Customer Surveys: A Roadmap to Better CX

November 20, 2024

EDITORIAL
Beyond Service: How CXM Drives Growth and Competitive Advantage

November 15, 2024

EDITORIAL
Building Strong Starts: Using Feedback to Elevate Employee Onboarding

November 13, 2024

EDITORIAL
Empower Your People: Modern HR & EX Management and the Role of Feedback Tools

November 8, 2024

EDITORIAL
Free but Powerful: The #1 Online Form Builder

November 5, 2024

EDITORIAL
Crafting the Perfect Survey: Key Strategies for High-Quality Data

November 1, 2024

EDITORIAL
Brands That Thrived With Online Surveys

October 25, 2024

EDITORIAL
Revisiting On-Premise: Navigating Your Options Between SaaS and Traditional Setups

October 18, 2024

EDITORIAL
From Custom Design to AI Analysis: How Walla Beats Google Forms 120%

October 13, 2024

EDITORIAL
Is Google Forms Enough? Key Drawbacks You Shouldn’t Overlook

October 9, 2024

EDITORIAL
Reimagining Convenience: Walla’s Ready-to-Use Survey Templates for Your Brand

October 2, 2024

EDITORIAL
Google Forms or Walla? A Comprehensive Feature-by-Feature Look

July 23, 2024

GUIDES
Manage Capacity Stress-Free: Quota Settings

July 19, 2024

EDITORIAL
Paprikan Canada Voyage : Inside and Beyond

February 16, 2024

GUIDES
The Marketer's Ace: Hidden Fields

February 14, 2024

EDITORIAL
Insights from Location Data

January 29, 2024

EDITORIAL
To Someone Who Has Been Staring at Data for 10 Hours

January 23, 2024

EDITORIAL
The Secret to Acquiring 30,000 Users with Minimal Marketing Budget

November 29, 2023

EDITORIAL
Paprikan's Open Hiring Journey

November 28, 2023

GUIDES
Survey Form Webhook Guidelines

August 31, 2023

EDITORIAL
Starting a Company and Living Together in Canada

June 12, 2023

GUIDES
Let's Group Data Using the Group By Feature

May 17, 2023

EDITORIAL
The Tiny History of Walla

May 15, 2023

EDITORIAL
Insights from Walla Team's Remarkable 220x Revenue Growth in Just 6 Months

April 28, 2023

EDITORIAL
Insights from a Walla Team Co-founder Shared in a University Lecture

April 5, 2023

GUIDES
How to Create a One-Page Survey

April 5, 2023

GUIDES
How to Set Up Notifications for Surveys

April 5, 2023

EDITORIAL
A Letter to Aspiring Entrepreneurs

March 29, 2023

EDITORIAL
Why Walla Became Walla: The Story Behind the Name

March 21, 2023

GUIDES
The Perfect Way to Collect Location Data

March 15, 2023

GUIDES
Fully Understand Logic Setting

March 14, 2023

GUIDES
Exploring Walla Team's Philosophy Behind Pricing

March 14, 2023

Silhouette of woman wearing black hat and black coat
GUIDES
Analyzing Response Sheet Data with GPT

March 8, 2023

Lightbulb
GUIDES
The Most Efficient Way to Use Google Forms

March 8, 2023

GUIDES
Hidden Fields: How to Stop Hiding and Start Using

March 8, 2023

EDITORIAL
Hello, It's Team Walla.

March 10, 2023

EDITORIAL
Why is it called Paprika Data Lab?

March 10, 2023

Load More

The form you've been searching for?

Walla, obviously.

Paprika Data Lab Inc.

The form you've been searching for?

Walla, obviously.

Paprika Data Lab Inc.

The form you've been searching for?

Walla, obviously.

Paprika Data Lab Inc.