The full operating system for customer-driven product work.
Damper is organized around the workflow teams actually run: collecting input, deciding what matters, planning the work, publishing progress, and extending the process with technical tooling when needed.
Every part of the product supports a specific step in the operating loop, so buyers can understand where it fits before they ever sign up.
- Collect input from the right places.
- Rank work using business-aware signals.
- Keep roadmap and release communication connected.
Bring feedback into one queue that stays workable.
Capture requests through the widget, public board, imports, or API so the team stops losing signal across channels.
- Embeddable feedback widget
- Feedback inbox with filters and triage
- Import and API support
Sort by customer value instead of raw noise.
Weighted voting and linked demand signals help the team focus on what matters to paying customers, not just what gets repeated most.
- Tier-based vote weighting
- Demand scoring across linked feedback
- Clear rationale for ranking
Turn validated demand into visible roadmap work.
Move the right items into a roadmap with clear status, visibility, and delivery context for the whole team.
- Private and public roadmap items
- Status flow across planned, active, and shipped work
- Alignment between feedback and roadmap state
Publish updates that close the loop with customers.
Create release notes and changelog entries that connect what shipped back to the work customers asked for.
- Draft and publish release updates
- Notify followers and voters
- Keep public communication aligned with shipped work
Add CLI and MCP when the workflow needs a technical layer.
Support engineering teams and agent workflows without turning the core product into an AI-only experience.
- MCP-compatible task flow
- CLI setup and operational guidance
- Project context for technical execution
Explore the part of the loop your team wants to fix first.
Start with collection, prioritization, roadmap visibility, or technical integration. The surfaces are designed to connect back together.