Control group: a two-hour roadmap review meeting. Six people in a room (virtual). We debated features. We argued about timelines. We discussed dependencies. We left feeling productive.
Test group: We fed the same roadmap into Claude. No slides. No politics. No one trying to protect their pet project. Just the raw plan. The prompt: "Analyze this roadmap. Identify the three most likely failure points. Use first principles reasoning. Assume we will follow your recommendations without ego. If you need more data, ask for it."
PLG was the backbone of some of the fastest-growing companies in history.
Slack grew by making team invites frictionless. Dropbox gave you free storage for every referral. Zoom let you host 40-minute meetings without a credit card. Those models worked because reducing friction was enough.
When we released the first version of the Quiz in Recall, we weren't sure how our users would respond. The Product Hunt launch exceeded our expectations, earning us product of the day, week, and month! Quiz has since become one of our stickiest features, with an average of 70 questions answered per user per month.
Given the strong engagement, we decided to invest further, bringing more question types, more flexibility in your review schedule, and our most exciting addition yet: shared quizzes. Save any content into Recall: YouTube videos, podcasts, PDFs, articles, TikToks, or take your own rich text notes and head over to the quiz tab to get started.
This release is a huge step for Recall. We started Recall with a focus on the content you consume: summarizing, saving, and organizing organizing YouTube videos, podcasts, TikToks, articles and PDFs. Now we're expanding to the content you create. While you've always been able to take notes in Recall's notebook tab, the editor was basic.