Signaldeck Is Now Generally Available
Public signups are now available for Signaldeck, a lightweight way to collect website and product feedback and review responses in one place.

Public signups are now available, and you can start collecting feedback with a free plan.
This is the simple version of what we have been building toward: a way for small teams to ask useful questions on their website or inside their product, collect the answers in one place, and turn those answers into product decisions.
Most teams do not have a feedback shortage. They have feedback scattered across support threads, analytics notes, calls, emails, internal docs, and half-remembered founder intuition. The hard part is not hearing from users once. The hard part is building a loop where feedback helps you decide what to fix, test, ship, or ignore.
That is what Signaldeck is for.
What Signaldeck is
Signaldeck helps you collect website and product feedback with lightweight widgets, surveys, and feedback forms.
You can add Signaldeck to a site with a script tag, create a focused question, and show it at the moment where the answer is useful. That could be a pricing page, an onboarding step, a product screen, a docs page, or a new feature you just shipped.
The goal is not to create another place for vague comments to pile up. The goal is to connect a question to a decision.
For example:
- "What stopped you from signing up today?"
- "Was anything confusing on this page?"
- "What were you hoping this feature would help you do?"
- "What should we improve before this is useful to your team?"
Those questions work because they point at a real product moment. They make it easier to understand what users are trying to do, where they get stuck, and what would change their next action.
What you can use it for
Signaldeck is built for solo founders, indie hackers, small SaaS teams, and product builders who need useful feedback without adding a heavy research process.
You can use it to understand why visitors leave a landing page, what trial users find confusing, which feature requests are repeating, or what customers need before they upgrade.
A few practical places to start:
- Add a question to your pricing page and ask what is unclear or missing.
- Ask new users what nearly stopped them during onboarding.
- Put a feedback widget on a feature you are considering changing.
- Run a short survey before you commit to a roadmap item.
- Collect open-ended answers after a product announcement or release.
The common thread is decision support. Feedback is more useful when it helps answer a question your team already has.
What happens after responses come in
Collecting responses is only the first step.
Signaldeck keeps responses together and uses AI to help summarize what people are saying. The AI is there to help you scan patterns faster: repeated themes, positive reactions, risks, and recommended next steps.
It does not replace product judgment. It gives you a better starting point.
If five people say your setup flow is confusing, you still need to decide whether to rewrite copy, change the UI, add help text, or leave it alone because another project matters more. But you should not have to manually reread every raw answer before you can see that setup is where the friction is.
That is the loop we care about:
- Ask a focused question.
- Collect responses at the right moment.
- Review the themes.
- Decide what action is worth taking.
- Ask again after the change.
It is a small habit, but it keeps feedback connected to product work.
Why general availability matters
Since onboarding our first customer in March 2025, teams have been using Signaldeck to collect feedback from their users while we improved the core feedback collection workflow.
General availability changes who can get started. You no longer need to be part of the early rollout or have an invite to try it.
You can sign up, create a project, add a feedback form, and start collecting responses today. The Signaldeck pricing page includes a free plan for getting started, plus paid options when you need more capacity or want to remove the Signaldeck branding from your forms.
We want this version to be useful for small teams that do not have a dedicated research function. If you are close enough to your users to know where the product questions are, Signaldeck should help you ask better questions and act on the answers sooner.
A good first feedback loop
If you are trying Signaldeck for the first time, start with one decision you already need to make.
Choose a page or product moment where you suspect users are hesitating. Add one question. Keep it specific. Let responses collect for a few days, then look for the pattern that would change your next move.
For a pricing page, that might be:
What is unclear or missing from this page?
For onboarding:
What felt hardest about getting started?
For a new feature:
What were you hoping this would help you do?
The first goal is not to build the perfect feedback program. The first goal is to close one clean loop between user input and a product decision.
Try Signaldeck
You can try Signaldeck for website and product feedback on the free plan and add your first feedback question today.
We will keep improving Signaldeck around the same idea that led us here: feedback is valuable when it improves a decision, changes a product, or strengthens the relationship with the user.
