Getting Feedback Before You Publish

Ship smarter - not just faster. Here’s how to collect helpful input before making your project live.

Last updated 10 months ago

Why Feedback Matters

Before you connect your domain or share your tool publicly, it’s important to know:

  • Does the tool solve the intended problem?

  • Is the user experience smooth?

  • Are there any confusing flows or bugs?

A quick round of feedback can save you hours of debugging and weeks of rework.

Who to Ask for Feedback

Start with:

  • Teammates

  • Existing users (if you’re replacing a manual process or old tool)

  • A few trusted friends or clients who resemble your target users

They don’t need to be technical - they just need to use the tool like a real user would.

How to Share Your Tool (Before Going Live)

While your app is still in development (i.e. not published under a custom domain), you’ll get a preview URL hosted on fly.io.

This lets you:

  • Open and use the live version of your app

  • Share it with others to test

  • Make edits in real-time using Kulp

What to Ask Testers to Do

Keep the feedback focused. Ask questions like:

  • “Can you complete the main task without help?”

  • “Is anything confusing or broken?”

  • “What would you expect this button or screen to do?”

  • “If this tool disappeared tomorrow, would you miss it?”

Ask them to use it naturally, not just skim it.

Collecting Feedback

Tools you can use:

  • Simple Google Form

  • WhatsApp or Slack messages

  • Screen recordings (e.g., Loom or ZipMessage)

  • In-app feedback widget (if you’ve added one)

Record their exact words, not just your interpretation.

Iterate Before You Publish

Once you’ve gathered feedback:

  • Update your prompt or modify specific features

  • Use “Fix the Issue” for quick changes

  • Preview again and re-test

Don’t aim for perfect - just aim for clear, usable, and functional.

Then Go Live

Once your test users are satisfied and your app feels stable, you’re ready to publish.

Getting a second set of eyes is the fastest way to build something people actually want.