Early Access Form Template
An early-access list that earns its invite order — first use case and founding-member interest captured alongside every address.
Early access is a trade: you get in before the polish, and what you do with it shapes what we build next. Tell us enough to put you in the right batch.
Early access is a commitment exchange, and most early-access forms only collect one side of it. The visitor is promising to use something unfinished; you are promising that their context will shape what gets finished. This template collects the context that makes the promise real — who they are, what they'd do first, and whether founding terms interest them — so your invite order can be a decision instead of a queue.
Why these fields. The persona question isn't demographics, it's routing: version one of anything fits some workflows better than others, and knowing whether your list leans founder, marketer, or developer tells you whose rough edges to sand first — "none of these, happily" is kept because the unexpected audiences are often the story. "What would you use it for first?" is the invite-order question, and the placeholder says so out loud: specifics move you up the list. Read twenty answers and your first batch names itself — the people whose first task sits closest to what already works get in early and succeed; the ones who need the missing feature get invited when it exists, which protects both them and your first impressions. The founding-pricing question sorts urgency without collecting a cent: "lock it in" people are your revenue-ready core, "tell me more" is your pricing-page audience, and "just want access" keeps the enthusiasts honest and welcome.
What we left out. Payment details — this form never touches money. Founding-member interest is a signal; the actual offer, terms, and checkout live in your invite email, where context flows both ways. Also roadmap-preference surveys (early access is about their task, not your backlog) and company-size ladders that make a two-minute form feel like procurement.
Who uses this. SaaS founders between demo and v1, plugin and tool developers converting an audience into first users, community products opening the doors a hundred people at a time, and studios who want their earliest users to be the loudest ones later.
Make it yours. The hidden invite_source field takes a value from each share link — ?invite_source=blog on your announcement post, another on the podcast pitch — so the CSV shows which channel produced the sharpest use cases, not just the most emails. Set a close date in Settings if "early" should mean something calendar-wise, and put the form behind your "Get early access" button with the popup embed so the landing page stays clean. Turn on email notifications and read the use-case answers as they arrive; they are the best product interviews you'll never have to schedule.
Invite like you mean it. Batch small, sequence by fit, and quote people's own use cases back to them in the invite email. An early-access program run off this list feels curated because it is — and curation is what people are actually joining.
Frequently asked questions
Does the founding-pricing question charge anyone?
No — the form never touches money. It records interest so you know who to make the founding offer to; the offer itself and any checkout happen in your invite email, on your terms.
How should I pick who gets invited first?
Filter the responses view by persona and read the first-use answers — invite the people whose first task matches what already works. The CSV export makes batch lists easy to assemble.
Can the list close on a specific date?
Yes — set a close date in Settings and the form shuts itself, showing your custom closed message. A real deadline is the cleanest way to make "early" mean something.
Can I tell which announcement drove the best signups?
Give each placement its own link, like ?invite_source=newsletter. The hidden field stamps every response, so you can compare channels by the quality of use cases, not just volume.