User Ratings

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99
4
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ease 1 of 5 2 of 5 3 of 5 4 of 5 5 of 5 4 / 5
features 1 of 5 2 of 5 3 of 5 4 of 5 5 of 5 4 / 5
design 1 of 5 2 of 5 3 of 5 4 of 5 5 of 5 4 / 5
support 1 of 5 2 of 5 3 of 5 4 of 5 5 of 5 4 / 5

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User Reviews

  • Saved me hours of work. Worked exactly as described. You are an angel.
  • Anybody who works with Excell knows how important is VCF format reading and conversion, made inside Excell, i.e. implemented as builtin Excell VBA script. Greatest thanks to the author.
  • Worked like a charm. Thank You!
  • After days of trying I finally found you in the web firmament. Very easy to use. Clear instructions. No obstacles or troubles. Thank you. Made me make peace with technology.
    1 user found this review helpful.
  • Thanks a lot for this tool. Nevertheless, I have found several bugs (I have created corresponding tickets), that prevent me to give more than 3 stars.....
  • Great tool. Ran into an issue with a VCARD that had over 32000 contacts in it. Of course, that number is well above the contacts limit of Google and Yahoo which were the 2 services that I've used in the past to convert vcards into CSV. This tool handled this massive 32000 contacts VCARD and converted it. It did generate a VBA error at the end about not being able to find a file, but the original VCARD file location was on a USB drive, so it looks like the macro wanted to create a temp file on the same location that the VCARD was located on. THIS ERROR DID NOT STOP THE MACRO FROM FINISHING !!! Clicked OK on the error, and boom, new spreadsheet opened up and the 32,000 contacts were all there ! Awesome job on this excel macro. Thanks!
  • Just fixed an issue with a 3000 vcf card in 24.5 seconds. ridiculously easy. Thanks so much.
  • As others have said - this is the best. And shame on Apple for making it so difficult to read their file formats. I like to occasionally create a backup of my contacts in a form that I can read and manipulate. As part of my business, I also help others clean up their contacts. Having contacts in Excel is the easiest way to accomplish that.
  • It took me a minute to figure out that this really wanted to be opened in my windows version of Excel, but I figured it out! Thank you for creating this! You rock! Also, Apple can go eat dirt for making this so difficult! Boo on them! Yay for you kind sir!
  • Brilliant! Thanks very much for this. It saved me a lot of messing about trying to convert a couple of VCF files to something sensible.
  • Very good!! :D They put a lot of work into it, compliments !! :) Works perfectly!!! :))))
  • VCF Import worked exactly as described. I used it on a windows 7 vmware image with Office 2003 to convert a gmail VCF and an iCloud VCF into a multi-entry CSV file that Outlook 2016 could import. The interface isn't very robust but it works perfectly. Steps: Enable macros in your copy of Excel. Double click on the downloaded xlsm file It will prompt you for the VCF file, select it. It will think for a moment, ask you if you want to delete empty columns (I said no) and then prompt you when its done. If you look in the same folder that had the VCF, you'll see a new CSV file. This is the file that you import into Outlook.
  • Did what I expected with a minimum of fuss. Sometimes less is more and for me this is one of those times. I loaded it up, enabled the macros, it asked for the file, opened it and converted it. Nice feature asks if you want to eliminate empty columns, which I did. Don't get 'featuritis' and mess this up!
  • Great utility and saved me a lot of time writing what would have been a not-so-quick and dirty cludge. Thanks Greg. I just had a problem as my export from Thunderbird had lower case field names so the code didn't find the begin:vcard and the end:vcard. Adding Ucase to the compares fixed it though. e.g. If UCase(strData(i)) = "BEGIN:VCARD" Then ... same for end:vcard. (Hard to believe I'm the first to use this with ThunderBird !)
    1 user found this review helpful.
  • Great utility! Trying to bring together contacts from various sources to compare and normalize in Excel. Iphone contacts to PC (to Excel) required conversion from vCard to CSV (by method I chose). The time I spend downloading and using this utility was mere minutes compared to the time spent researching the steps to get my contacts into the format I needed. Again, great utility and thank you for making it available. I would recommend it to anyone!
  • worked fantastically on 1000+ records in 28 seconds without a fluke left alone accents but we europeans know that you guys out there far west from us don't understand these :):)
  • Code stopped with runtime error 5, and i emailed Greg, attaching my 11,000 plus file of contacts. He found the problem was a graphic file inserted into one of the fields. He fixed my file and sent it back to me clean and converted to Excel!!! Such amazing service, I was blown away.
  • Software developer by trade, I am reticent to try any sort of macros posted online for fear of virus-like behavior. But I needed something to take the 1600+ contacts on my phone in .vcf format and convert them to .csv. I downloaded this, looked it over, enabled editing, enabled macros, and chose my file. Export was from a Droid Turbo 2 (Verizon) running Android 7.0. It converted everything perfectly to .csv, and then I could sport and save as Excel. Well done!
  • Needed a simple solution and 14 secs later got a complete csv file with 2000 addresses.
  • This file provided a seamless conversion from macOS Sierra Contacts VCF (14.5 MB) to CSV. The CSV file will be imported into our new CRM app. Highly recommend!
  • Lifesaver! I wanted to dump out my phone's internal Contacts and pull them into Outlook to clean up, merge, etc. Android (mine at least) only exports to a multi-contact .VCF which Outlook can't import properly. Open the macro in Excel, click the two prompts to allow editing and then allow macros. You are prompted for the path to the VCF file, and voila, you have a .CSV file and an .XLSX to boot. The resulting CSV imported into Outlook 2016 (Office 365) perfectly. Great work!
  • Sorry this is my 1st post so please excuse any newbie mistakes. Can this be used with "free" office suites like WPS? I downloaded the file and opened in WPS spreadsheets but there was no option to 'import the vcf file from local storage. (Rated this a 3, as it won't let me post without rating, but kind of N/A here since I have not used it yet) Thank you, Max
  • OK, several things. You *can* convert multiple *.vcf files to a *.csv file with this tool. Simply concatenate them together. On Mac, I used "cat *vcf >> all.vcf " which did it. Second, Excel 2016 for Mac throws an error on the macro. But Excel 2011 for Mac works without a problem. Lastly - it worked, and worked good! But please update the instructions to talk about multiple files, and check out the Mac Excel 2016 issues. I wasted a lot of time, assuming I couldn't use your macro.
  • This program worked a treat; I too just created an account to say thank you. My problem was that although my Gigaset N510 reported successfully transferring the contents of a .vcf file to a handset, in fact, only some of the entries made it across. I wanted to look at the .vcf file to work out what had happened which in the end was straight forward: there had to be a First or Last Name, company names were ignored. Thanks again.
  • Perfect solution & works exactly as stated. Always a pleasing experience when running on a Mac Pro running Sierra 10.12.3. Takes its time to convert but that VB for you & it does prewarn you it may take a few minutes. Worth the wait as the results are Top bannana :)