Find beta testers for your product
Stop asking friends to test. CatchIntent finds enthusiastic early adopters actively looking for new products to try.
Finding quality beta testers is hard
You need testers who care about your product category, will actually use it, and provide meaningful feedback.
Friends and family aren't ideal
They'll be nice but not honest. You need testers who represent real users with real problems.
Beta signup pages get crickets
A signup page assumes people find you. Most potential testers never see your product exists.
Random testers don't stick
Testers with no genuine interest in your category sign up, try once, and disappear.
Finding the right audience
Your ideal beta testers are discussing the exact problem you solve. But where are those conversations?
Timing matters
When someone asks 'is there a tool that does X?' and you're building that tool — they should be your beta tester.
Recruit beta testers who care
CatchIntent finds users actively interested in your product category and looking for solutions to try.
Early adopter identification
Find users who love trying new tools and providing feedback. They're posting on Reddit, X, LinkedIn, and HN daily.
Problem-match recruitment
Identify users discussing the exact problem your product solves. They're already invested in a solution.
'Looking to try' signals
Detect posts where users want to try new tools: 'anyone have recommendations?' 'looking for beta products to test.'
Category enthusiasts
Find users passionate about your product category who will provide expert feedback.
Honest feedback seekers
Reddit, X, LinkedIn, and HN users are brutally honest. They'll give you real feedback, not polite encouragement.
How it works
Get started in minutes, not days
Define your ideal tester
Add keywords for the problem you solve, your product category, and signals of early adopter behavior.
AI finds potential testers
CatchIntent identifies users interested in your category and showing early-adopter characteristics.
Reach out personally
Invite interested users to your beta. Personal invitations convert better than generic signup pages.
Gather quality feedback
Testers who sought out your category provide meaningful feedback that improves your product.
Why teams choose CatchIntent
Quality over quantity
Ten engaged testers beat a thousand signups who never try your product.
Problem-motivated testers
Users who have the problem you solve are motivated to test properly and give useful feedback.
Brutally honest feedback
Reddit, X, LinkedIn, and HN users won't spare your feelings. They'll tell you what's actually broken.
Future advocates
Beta testers who love your product become your first advocates and evangelists.
Faster iteration
Quick access to engaged testers means faster feedback loops and product improvement.
Community building
Early testers form the foundation of your product community and word-of-mouth growth.
Simple pricing,
no surprises
Pay for high-quality signals, not keyword noise. All plans include monitoring across all supported platforms.
Free Trial
$07-day free trial included with every plan. Try CatchIntent risk-free.
Basic
For solo founders testing the waters.
Pro
PopularFor teams ready to scale outreach.
Enterprise
For teams who need the best signals & full control.
Frequently Asked Questions
Where do early adopters hang out?
r/SideProject, r/startups, r/alphaandbetausers, HN 'Show HN' threads, and category-specific communities. CatchIntent monitors them all.
How should I reach out to potential testers?
Be transparent about being in beta. Explain what you're building and why you think they'd be a good fit based on their post. Make it personal.
What makes a good beta tester?
Someone who has the problem you solve, is willing to try new tools, and will communicate issues clearly. CatchIntent helps find all three.
How many beta testers do I need?
Quality matters more than quantity. 20-50 engaged testers often provide more value than 500 inactive signups.
Can I incentivize beta testers?
Free extended access or lifetime deals work well. But early adopters are often motivated by the product itself if it solves their problem.
Should I wait until the product is ready?
Early adopters expect rough edges. Ship early, get feedback, iterate. Waiting for perfection delays learning.
Have more questions? Browse all FAQs or book a demo to talk to our team.