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From Frustration to Creation: How I Built a Free Feedback Widget to Simplify User Insights ๐Ÿš€

Hey dev.to community! ๐Ÿ‘‹

I want to share a journey that started out of pure frustration and ended up with a solution that Iโ€™m pretty excited about: Feedbhack โ€” a free, easy-to-use feedback widget for websites.

The Problem: Trying to Get Feedback, One Complex Tool at a Time ๐Ÿ˜ฉ
It all began when I was launching a side project a few months ago. Like most of you, I wanted to get user feedback to understand what people liked, what they didnโ€™t, and what features they were missing. I tried integrating some popular feedback tools, but every solution I tested was either:

๐Ÿคฏ Overcomplicated, with a million settings I didnโ€™t need.
๐Ÿ’ธ Locked behind paywalls, asking for a subscription just to access basic features.
๐Ÿงฉ Too invasive for my small project โ€” I just wanted something simple and lightweight.
I thought, โ€œWhy does getting basic feedback have to be so hard?โ€ I knew there had to be a simpler way.

First schemas

The Idea: Build Something Just for Developers ๐Ÿ› ๏ธ
Thatโ€™s when I decided to build Feedbhack. I wanted it to be something Iโ€™d personally use: a lightweight widget that I could integrate with just a single line of code, zero dependencies, and no crazy configuration. As developers, we donโ€™t want another product taking up our time โ€” we want something that just works.

Build first feedbhack.com views

The Journey: Turning Frustration into Code ๐Ÿ’ป
I started building Feedbhack from scratch, focusing on three core principles:

Simplicity: Add Feedbhack to any site with a single <script> tag โ€” thatโ€™s it.
Customizability: Provide options to customize the widgetโ€™s look and feel, but keep it straightforward and developer-friendly.
Privacy-First: Respect user privacy. No tracking, no data sharing โ€” just feedback.
After a few long nights of coding, coffee-fueled debugging sessions, and some generous feedback from fellow developers, Feedbhack was born!

The Solution: Feedbhack โ€” Collect Feedback Without the Hassle ๐ŸŽ‰
Feedbhack is now live, and Iโ€™m excited to share it with you. Hereโ€™s what it offers:

Integration feedbhack

Integration feedbhack playground configurator

One-Line Integration: Just copy the provided <script> tag, paste it into your siteโ€™s HTML, and boom! Your widget is live.
Custom Feedback Types: Choose what you want to collect (e.g., Bugs, Feature Requests, General Comments).
Simple UI: A clean and minimal design that wonโ€™t interrupt your users.
Privacy-Respecting: No sneaky tracking scripts. Your data stays yours, period.
Completely Free: No paywalls, no subscriptions. Just a free tool built to help other developers.
Whatโ€™s Next? ๐Ÿค”
Iโ€™m already working on adding new features like more customization options and a dashboard to view all collected feedback in one place. But Iโ€™d love to hear from you โ€” the dev community! If thereโ€™s a feature youโ€™d like to see, or if you have any suggestions on how Feedbhack can be improved, let me know in the comments or DM me. Iโ€™m all ears!

Want to Try It Out?
Feel free to check it out here: Feedbhack.com. Iโ€™d love to get your feedback (pun intended ๐Ÿ˜„)!

TL;DR:
I built a free feedback widget called Feedbhack because I was tired of overly complicated and expensive solutions. Itโ€™s simple, customizable, privacy-focused, and perfect for developers and small projects. Add it to your site with a single <script> tag and start collecting feedback with ease.

What do you think? Iโ€™d love to hear your thoughts, and if you decide to give Feedbhack a try, let me know how it goes!

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