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How I Filter Customer Feedback Without Losing Focus

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Day 187: My 'Feedback Filter' System: How I Turn Noise into Actionable Insights (Without Getting Overwhelmed)

My inbox used to be a terrifying black hole. Seriously.

As soon as my first few users started trickling in for my little side project, the emails, the Discord messages, the social media DMs - they all started flooding in. And it wasn't just a trickle; it was a deluge of conflicting requests, bug reports, feature ideas, and sometimes, just plain venting.

I remember one evening, staring at my screen, feeling completely paralyzed. One user was begging for a dark mode, another was furious about a missing CSV export feature, and a third was suggesting an entirely new monetization strategy that would completely change the product's direction.

I wanted to build what my users needed, but it felt like I was being pulled in a dozen different directions at once. I was getting overwhelmed, and worse, I was starting to dread checking my feedback channels.

That's when I knew I needed a system. A way to tame the chaos and actually use this valuable feedback to build a better product, not just react to every single whim. I needed a "Feedback Filter."

The 'Feedback Filter' System: Turning Noise into Signal

My system is pretty simple, really. It's not rocket science, but it's been a game-changer for me.

It’s a multi-stage process designed to categorize, validate, and prioritize everything that comes my way. I use a combination of Notion and a simple spreadsheet, but you could adapt this to any tool you prefer.

Here's how it breaks down:

Stage 1: The Collection Hub

First, I've one central place where all feedback lands. This is usually my email inbox, but I also have dedicated channels in Discord and a simple form on my website.

The key here is consistency. I don't want ideas scattered across a dozen platforms.

A screenshot of an organized inbox with feedback categorized

My goal in this stage is just to capture, not to judge. Anything a user tells me goes into this hub.

Stage 2: The Categorization & Validation Pass

This is where the filtering really begins. I set aside dedicated time each week (usually an hour) to go through everything in my Collection Hub. For each piece of feedback, I ask a few key questions and assign it a category:

  • What is this? (Bug report, feature request, usability issue, compliment, question, etc.)
  • Is this a bug or an intended behavior? (This is crucial for bug reports.)
  • How many users are requesting this or experiencing this? (I use a simple counter.)
  • Does this align with my product's core vision? (This is the big one.)

I then move the feedback into my Notion database, which has properties for each of these questions.

A Notion database view showing feedback categorized and scored

For example, a bug report gets categorized as "Bug." If multiple users report the same bug, I'll note that. A feature request that aligns with my product's core purpose gets flagged as "High Priority Feature Request" and gets a count. Something that's completely outside my vision might be marked as "Low Priority" or "Not a Fit."

Stage 3: The Prioritization & Action Plan

Once everything is categorized and validated, I can finally prioritize. I look at:

  1. Impact vs. Effort: How much value will this change bring to users, and how much work will it take for me to implement?
  2. Alignment with Vision: Does this move my product closer to its core goal?
  3. User Demand: How many people are asking for this, or how many are affected by this bug?

I use a simple scoring system within Notion. Bugs that break core functionality and affect many users automatically jump to the top. Feature requests that have multiple mentions and align perfectly with my product's direction also get high priority.

A Trello-like board visualizing prioritized feedback items

This stage is where the magic happens. Instead of a chaotic inbox, I've a clear, prioritized backlog of tasks that I know are valuable and aligned with what I'm trying to build.

The Takeaway: Your Roadmap to Sanity

As a solo founder, you're the product manager, the developer, and the customer support team all rolled into one. Managing feedback effectively isn't just about building the right features; it's about protecting your sanity and your focus.

This "Feedback Filter" system has helped me:

  • Reduce overwhelm: By having a structured process, I know what needs attention and what can wait.
  • Make confident decisions: I'm no longer guessing what users want; I'm acting on validated data.
  • Stay focused: I can clearly see which requests align with my product's vision and which don't, helping me say "no" gracefully.
  • Build faster: A clear backlog means less time spent figuring out what to build next.

If you're feeling swamped by feedback, try implementing a simple filtering system. Start capturing everything in one place, dedicate time to categorize and validate, and then prioritize based on impact and vision. It's a small change that can make a massive difference in how you build and grow your product.

What's your go-to method for managing customer feedback? I'd love to hear about it in the comments!

Hien Phan

Struggling to turn ideas into profitable products? Building 52 products in 365 days, sharing the real journey from concept to revenue. Weekly insights on product development and solo founder lessons.

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How I Filter Customer Feedback Without Losing Focus | Hien Phan - Solo Developer Building 52 Products in 365 Days