I got tired of roadmaps living in a private Jira board nobody outside the team ever sees. So I'm building Roadmark: you import your milestones (GitHub/Jira/Notion/Monday .com & more), then share a clean, public roadmap board that actually looks good.
A few things that make it different:
It's a true micro-SaaS: just me, bootstrapped, on a serverless stack. Free to start.
I'm taking on ~10–15 design partners who are building or investing right now. Sign up, then reply here — I'll set you up with the full Team plan free for a year. I want the deep feedback, so I'm keeping it small.
Live demo board: https://yourroadmark.com/board/roadmark-demo
The milestone confidence and slip history stood out to me.
Most roadmap tools optimize for presenting certainty. You're making uncertainty visible instead. If customers start seeing Roadmark as a tool for building trust with users and stakeholders—not just organizing work—that's a much more distinctive position than being another public roadmap.
Hi, Aryan! You said it better than my landing page — thanks. That's the whole bet: tools that sell certainty train people to distrust the roadmap. So Roadmark leans into honesty — confidence, slip history, and a just-shipped public "Decision Feed" for the why behind every change. Curious from where you sit: would a team actively buy "trust with stakeholders," or is that value only felt after a plan slips?
That's a great question, but I don't think whether teams buy trust before or after a roadmap slips is actually the interesting decision.
Your reply made me think there's a bigger strategic decision sitting underneath that question, and it becomes much more significant as Roadmark grows. I don't think I can explain the reasoning properly in a thread without oversimplifying it.
If you're interested, what's the best email to reach you on?
Appreciate it, and the framing earlier was genuinely sharp. Keeping my focus on building for now rather than opening a big strategic thread — but thanks for taking the time.
Totally fair.
I appreciate the thoughtful discussion either way. Best of luck with Roadmark—I'll be interested to see how it evolves.
Small poll while this is up: when a roadmap date slips, where does the "reason" end up for you?
I keep landing on 2 and 4. Curious where everyone else sits.