Waitlisty is a simple form builder that lets you collect user information for your next product launch. When users sign up for your waitlist, they are given a referral code. As they refer more users to your product, they move up your waitlist. You decide how to reward your top waitlist referrers.
No features have been listed yet.
No Waitlisty.io videos yet. You could help us improve this page by suggesting one.
Waitlisty.io's answer:
Waitlisty lets you create a custom email collection form without writing any code. Just sign up, create a project and copy / paste two lines of code into your website. Get up and running in 5 minutes.
Waitlisty.io's answer:
Waitlisty stores your collected emails so you don't have to. We'll never sell you or your submitters' data.
Waitlisty.io's answer:
Our primary audience is someone who doesn't want to bother building their email collection form. Waitlisty's no-code form builder will get you up and running in 5 minutes.
Waitlisty.io's answer:
Waitlisty came about because there needs to be a simpler, more affordable solution for collecting and storing something as basic as an email. Other services are bloated with features. Waitlisty is exactly what you need - a way to collect and store emails for your next product launch. With gamification built in.
Waitlisty.io's answer:
Emails are stored in a secure postgres database. Our frontend is built with NextJS.
Based on our record, Cargo seems to be more popular. It has been mentiond 37 times since March 2021. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
I have a domain with a mail on strato.de (S) and a website on cargo.site (C). Source: 7 months ago
I had struggles adding my webmail to a mail service and according to my webhost that was because I had the NS-Records pointed to my external website-host (where I built my website: https://cargo.site/). So I pointed the NS-Records back to the webhost and was told to point the domain to my site via A-Records (IP-adress) instead. Then I tried to ping my website to find out the IP adress and pointed my domains... Source: 7 months ago
As u/purpleornavy commented, you can use https://builtwith.com/ to find out what technologies were used to create a website. It appears the website you linked is created with cargo.site. If you look on their wesite in the templates section, you can actually find a template that is pretty similar to the website you linked. Source: about 1 year ago
I like Cargo for this reason. Their templates are unique and much more intended for a “creatives” market. They offer discounts to students in the top design and art schools. My web developer professor this semester at Pratt talked a lot about this exact concept, though. He encouraged us to get creative and gave examples showing sites from the flash era. The websites a lot of people came up with in the class were... Source: about 1 year ago
Hey, loving your tool and have been using it a LOT recently. I'm a newbie to a lot of web management of DNS etc., so this might be an easy one: but when I look up my domain for example https://www.nslookup.io/domains/kristiankruse.com/dns-records/ it doesn't find any CNAME records, why is that? It's a cargo.site site so has to use their DNS Manager. Assuming that's why, but still wondered. Also, if you had... Source: about 1 year ago
about.me - About.me lets you quickly build simple and visually elegant splash pages that points visitors to your content from around the web. Get started today.
LaunchList - Create waitlist with referral for your product launch
Carrd - Simple, responsive one-page site creator.
Waitlist API - Quick and easy waitlist with built in referral.
Webflow - Build dynamic, responsive websites in your browser. Launch with a click. Or export your squeaky-clean code to host wherever you'd like. Discover the professional website builder made for designers.
Wraith Docs - The easiest way to edit and polish your Google Docs.