Show the world what you are building. Let users vote on priorities, track progress in real time, and get notified when you ship. Transparency that reduces churn and builds trust.
This is a live public roadmap. Click a vote button. That is exactly what your users will experience.
Four steps from silent users to engaged advocates.
Before
With ProductLift
Embed your public roadmap on any website with a code snippet. Or host it on a subdomain like roadmap.yoursite.com. Custom colors, fonts, and full white-label branding on every plan.
Anonymous voting removes friction. Users upvote without creating an account. Stripe integration shows the revenue behind every vote so you know which requests come from your highest paying customers.
Define your product vision once. AI analyzes every request against that vision, user demand, and strategic fit. Or use RICE, ICE, and MoSCoW frameworks with revenue weighted scoring.
5,204
Teams sharing public roadmaps
4.8
Average rating on G2
10 min
To go live with your first public roadmap
Sebastian F.
Entrepreneur
Aaron Dye
Timothy M.
Product Manager
Ben
Product Owner
Marco
Chris R.
Founder
Show customers what you are building next. Reduce churn by proving your product is actively evolving. Voters stay subscribed longer because they see their feedback become real features.
Give contributors and users visibility into your direction. Replace scattered GitHub issues with a clear, votable roadmap. Community members prioritize what matters to them.
Developers want to know what's coming before they commit to your platform. A public roadmap answers that question and builds confidence in your long term direction.
Share project progress with clients through a public or private roadmap. Clients check status on their own schedule. You stop preparing weekly status reports.
One platform for the entire product lifecycle. Each step feeds the next.
I built ProductLift because I was tired of guessing what users wanted. Sharing a public roadmap changed everything for my own products. Users stopped asking "are you still working on this?" and started engaging. Churn dropped. Feature requests went from noise to signal.
A public roadmap isn't just a list of planned features. It's a conversation with your users. When someone votes for a feature and you ship it months later, they get notified automatically. That moment, when a user realizes you actually listened, is what turns customers into advocates. That's why over 3,000 teams trust ProductLift.
Ruben Buijs
Founder of ProductLift
Transparency builds trust. When users can see what you are building and why, they stop wondering if your product has a future. A public roadmap answers the question "is this product still being developed?" before anyone needs to ask it.
Voters feel heard. Every vote creates a connection between a user and your product direction. When that user sees their request move from Planned to In Progress to Shipped, they feel ownership. That emotional investment reduces the chance they leave.
Prospects see momentum. A public roadmap with recently shipped items and active voting tells prospects "this product is alive and improving." It is one of the strongest trust signals you can show during a buying decision.
Not everything belongs on a public roadmap. Competitive features, security improvements, and internal tooling should stay private. ProductLift handles both with granular visibility controls.
Public boards let anyone view and vote on items. Share them on your website, link from your docs, or embed in your product. Users see what you are building and influence priorities.
Private boards are visible only to your team. Use them for internal planning, sensitive features, or early stage ideas you aren't ready to share. When an item is ready to go public, change its visibility with one click.
Per item control: You can also control visibility at the item level. Keep a board public but mark specific items as internal only. Your public roadmap shows your direction while sensitive details stay private.
Go live in 10 minutes. Show users what you are building and let them vote.