Selge for Solopreneur
One person. One script tag. Real answers from real visitors.
$19
per month. Full features. No enterprise bloat.
Built for you
5 min
from signup to first survey live on your site
No engineers
97
responses collected while you slept on autopilot
Set and forget
Why didn't you sign up?
Exit intent on /pricing
“Looks great but I'm just one person — I wanted to make sure I'd actually use it before paying.”
Why solopreneur teams fly blind without surveys
01
You wear every hat. Research isn't one of them.
User interviews take days to schedule and synthesise. You need a way to hear from users that fits in between shipping and support.
Set up a survey in 5 minutes. Let it run. Read answers over coffee.
02
You're making decisions on small sample sizes
Three customers complained about the onboarding. You rebuilt it. Maybe the other 200 were fine with it. You'll never know.
An always-on NPS or CSAT survey gives you a continuous signal, not a one-off complaint.
03
Enterprise tools are priced for enterprise teams
Most survey platforms charge $99/mo minimum for features you don't need and integrations you'll never use.
Selge starts at $19/month. One domain, real features, no enterprise overhead.
Set it up once. Get answers forever.
Sign up and install
One script tag in your site's <head>. That's it. Works on any website, no plugin required.
Pick a template
Choose from expert-crafted surveys. No blank page, no guessing what to ask.
Let it run
Surveys collect responses automatically. Check your dashboard weekly and let the answers guide your decisions.
Survey use cases for solopreneur teams
The right question, at the right moment, for the decisions your team actually makes.
01
Understand why your homepage isn't converting
On exit intent from your homepage or sales page
Ask: 'What stopped you from signing up today?' One question, open text. The first 10 responses will tell you more than any analytics tool.
02
Validate your next product decision
On your dashboard or main product view, shown to active users
Ask: 'If you could change one thing about [product], what would it be?' The answer is your next sprint.
03
Understand your visitors
On homepage, to new visitors
Ask: 'What brought you here today?' You'll discover use cases you never anticipated and traffic sources you didn't know were working.
04
Test pricing before you change it
On your pricing page
Ask: 'What's your main hesitation about the pricing?' before making any pricing changes. You'll know whether the problem is price, value clarity, or plan structure.
What solopreneur teams measure
And how on-site surveys give each metric more signal and less guesswork.
Homepage conversion rate
Percentage of homepage visitors who sign up or take the primary CTA action.
Exit surveys on your homepage reveal whether low conversion is a messaging problem, a trust problem, or a targeting problem.
Monthly recurring revenue (MRR)
Predictable monthly revenue from subscriptions.
Churn surveys and pricing page surveys directly feed MRR improvement — by identifying why people don't convert and why customers leave.
Things you can do this week
Start with one survey
Pick your most important page — probably your homepage or pricing page — add one exit-intent question, and leave it running for 30 days. You'll have your first insight within 48 hours.
Read every response personally
At your scale, 20 responses is a meaningful sample. Read each one. Look for the word or phrase that appears in 3+ responses — that's your signal.
Use survey copy in your own copy
When users describe their problem in a survey response more compellingly than your current headline, use their words. They've already tested the message with themselves.
Start with an expert survey, not a blank page
Each template includes guidance on when to deploy it, what trigger to use, and what to do with the answers.
When 35% of visitors are cross-shopping one competitor, you build a comparison page. This survey builds your competitive strategy with zero research budget.
Analytics tells you where visitors came from. This tells you why they showed up — and what job they're trying to do right now.
Analytics tells you where they drop off. This tells you why — in their own words.