Feature requested
Dark mode requested by 12 users
Write one release note. RelayFast turns it into your public changelog, a subscriber email, and an in-app announcement — so the users who asked for a feature actually find out you built it.
Founder offer · 20 of 20 seats left
I’m looking for the first 20 SaaS founders to run a real changelog, request board, subscriber update, or in-app widget before the Product Hunt launch. Get Pro beta access for 3 months in exchange for honest feedback on what should be simpler.
What early founders get
Close the loop
When you ship something users asked for, RelayFast helps you close the loop. Turn one shipped feature into a changelog post, subscriber update, and in-app announcement — so users actually see what changed.
Dark mode requested by 12 users
Write one update when the feature goes live
Published to your changelog, email subscribers, and in-app widget
Your users asked. Show them you listened.
What it replaces
Small teams can keep the process tight: write the update, publish it, notify the right people, and keep feedback attached to the product surface.
From draft to in-app update
Write the release note once, then let RelayFast turn it into a hosted page, RSS item, subscriber update, and in-app announcement while feedback stays attached to the same product history.
Write rich changelog posts with categories, media, previews, and publishing controls in one focused editor.
Send only the updates that deserve an inbox, with verified subscribers and clear unsubscribe paths built in.
Turn reactions, votes, and feature requests into visible feedback instead of a scattered support queue.
Drop the widget into your app so active users see launches where they already work.
Launch note
Widget targeting controls
Customers can now choose where the widget appears and which updates open by default.
Feedback attached
In-app update
New controls are live in the widget settings screen.
From the founder
RelayFast exists because I shipped features my own users had asked for, and they never found out. The release note lived in one place, the email list in another, the in-app banner in a third — so most releases went out quietly or not at all.
Now one post updates the changelog, emails subscribers, and announces in-app — so the loop closes by default instead of by memory.
— The founder of RelayFast
Simple pricing
Start with the free plan, then upgrade when you need more projects, unlimited posts, subscriber notifications, custom branding, and custom domains.
Free
$0
Good for validating the workflow with one project, hosted changelog, feature requests, RSS, and the widget.
Get startedPro, upgrade when ready
$180 per year when billed annually
Set up your changelog, feedback board, subscriber list, and app widget in minutes. No credit card required.