Your feedback is everywhere — Slack threads, Intercom support tickets, review sites, DMs. ProductBridge's AI agent collects it all automatically, organizes it, deduplicates, and helps your team ship what users actually want. Users request features, upvote, and watch ideas move through your public roadmap. Teams prioritize with data, publish changelogs, and auto-notify users when their feature ships. One platform. Complete feedback loop. Flat pricing. No seat fees. No surprises. Ever.










Paperguide
Congratulations @hareesh_vemasani and team. Great idea to simplify life for product and customer service folks
Congratulations on the launch! 🚀
As a Systems Architect, I’ve seen how quickly feedback debt can kill a roadmap. Most teams lose hours just deduplicating Slack threads and DMs instead of actually shipping.
What I really appreciate about ProductBridge is the move toward an automated feedback loop. We’re currently entering an era of 'Agentic Infrastructure,' and having an AI agent that doesn't just collect data, but organizes and prioritizes it without seat-fee friction, is a massive win for scaling teams.
The public roadmap + auto-notification feature is the 'closing of the loop' that most platforms miss. Definitely looking forward to seeing how this streamlines the dev-to-user connection.
Wishing the team a huge launch week!
Guys, your tool promises something very interesting. From what I understand, it seems to be a translator between the development team and stakeholders.
Not to mention the transparency that the tool provides.
Congratulations and good luck!!!
This tackles something most teams don't even name correctly. The problem isn't collecting feedback, it's trusting it. When it's scattered across five channels and shaped by whoever shouts loudest, it stops being signal and starts being noise.
What you've built gives it structure without turning it into a bureaucratic process, which is harder than it looks.
The "close the loop" feature is the one I'd lead with more. Letting users see their idea actually move and get notified when it ships, that's not just a nice touch. That's where real retention happens. Most tools skip that part entirely.
One thing worth testing on the messaging side: lean harder into the before and after. The current copy explains what it does well, but the chaos to clarity transformation could land faster for founders who are skimming. Show them the Friday afternoon of dread before your tool, then after.
Quick question, where's the highest-signal feedback been coming from for your own users? Slack, support tickets, public reviews? Genuinely curious how that plays out in practice.
Really like where this is going.