In this interview, we speak with Devin, the founder of Waitlister, which is a no-code tool built to help founders create waitlists and validate their product ideas before launch. After spotting a gap in the market, Devin set out to make the process easier for solo founders, eliminating the need for coding or juggling multiple tools.
In this Q&A, they explain why they created Waitlister, the challenges they faced while building it, and how they plan to grow the platform. Plus, they share some practical advice for founders looking to build hype and get their products noticed before launch.
Let’s get into it.
I created Waitlister after noticing how many founders were struggling with validating their product ideas and the technical aspects of launching a waitlist page. The usual approach requires purchasing domains, coding landing pages, setting up databases, and configuring email services — all before validating their idea. I saw an opportunity to make this process into a single, no-code solution that would let founders focus on what matters most: building their product and connecting with potential users.
Success for Waitlister is about helping founders validate their ideas and launch their products successfully. While revenue is important for sustainability, our primary metric is how many founders we can help. We measure this through both quantitative metrics like user engagement and conversion rates, and qualitative feedback about how Waitlister has made their launch process easier.
Before building Waitlister, I spent time in founder communities and saw the common challenges people faced when trying to build pre-launch momentum. I saw founders cobbling together multiple tools to create basic waitlists or using simple forms that lacked features like email validation or analytics, which validated the need for a simpler solution.
The biggest challenge was finding the right balance between simplicity and functionality. While we wanted to make Waitlister as easy to use as possible, we also needed to include essential features that founders require for effective launch campaigns. We overcame this by focusing first on core features like customization, email sending, referral system, and analytics, then iteratively adding more advanced capabilities like API based on user feedback. This approach helped us maintain the platform's ease of use while adding to its capabilities.
We prioritized features that were essential for a successful product launch: a drag-and-drop editor for quick setup, customizable forms and landing pages, emails, and basic analytics. The toughest decision was around the pricing model — while we wanted to make Waitlister accessible to early-stage founders, we needed to ensure sustainability. We decided to offer a generous free tier while keeping paid plans affordable with one-time fees rather than subscriptions.
At this point, our scaling strategy focuses on solo founders and small teams who need a quick, reliable way to validate their ideas and build pre-launch momentum. We're especially resonating with no-code builders and solo entrepreneurs who want to invest their limited time on the product itself. By keeping our solution simple and affordable, we're able to serve this growing community effectively while collecting insights for further scaling in the future.
In five years, we see Waitlister evolving into a complete pre-launch toolkit. While waitlist management will remain our core focus, we see opportunities to add features that help founders better understand and engage their early audience. This could include better analytics, automated engagement tools, and deeper integrations with popular marketing platforms. Our goal is to stay focused on making the pre-launch phase as effective as possible for founders.
One early mistake was trying to include too many features at once during initial development. I quickly learned that focusing on doing a few core things exceptionally well is more valuable than having many mediocre features. This taught me to really listen to user feedback and prioritize quality over quantity, which has become a core principle in how we develop Waitlister.
To be honest, I didn't really have any special habits or routines — my productivity comes from a passion for building products. When you're excited about what you're creating and think it has potential, staying productive comes naturally.
There are a number of proven strategies you can do:
Waitlister helps founders validate ideas with a simple, no-code tool, eliminating the need for complex setups
Success is defined by the number of founders helped, focusing on user engagement and product launch ease
Scaling focuses on solo founders and no-code builders, with plans to expand into a full pre-launch toolkit