AnnounceKit vs Olvy

AnnounceKit and Olvy both help software teams tell users what shipped, but they approach the job differently. AnnounceKit is a product-communication platform centered on making sure users see your updates — ten-plus widget formats, segmentation, email digests, feedback boards, and NPS, with flat per-project pricing. Olvy is an AI-powered user-feedback platform (now owned by Amoeboids) where changelogs and release notes are one module of a broader feedback-analysis suite. Here's how the two compare on features, pricing, and fit — and where each falls short.

AnnounceKit vs Olvy vs Shipstar

AnnounceKit

Changelog, in-app updates, and feature requests in one product-communication platform

Best for
SaaS product and customer-success teams that want widgets, targeting, feedback, and NPS bundled in one flat-priced tool
Starting price
$79/mo (annual)
Free plan
None — 15-day trial

Olvy

AI feedback management with release notes as the announcement layer

Best for
product managers who want to centralize and AI-analyze user feedback, with a changelog to close the loop
Starting price
$60/mo
Free plan
Yes — 1 builder, 25 feedback items/mo

Shipstar

This is us

Automated product marketing generated from your Git activity

Best for
engineers and lean product teams who want release marketing written and distributed automatically
Starting price
Free · Solo from $20/mo
Free plan
Yes — 1 project, 1,000 credits/mo

Side-by-side features

Based on each vendor's public website, pricing page, and documentation. Features and prices change — always confirm details with the vendor before you buy.

FeatureAnnounceKitOlvyShipstar
Starting price$79/mo (annual)$60/moFree · Solo from $20/mo
Free planNone — 15-day trialYes — 1 builder, 25 feedback items/moYes — 1 project, 1,000 credits/mo
AI writes content from your Git activity
AI drafts from a description
AI writes from typed context/issues
From commits & PRs
Native GitHub integration
Via Zapier
Hosted public changelog page
Embeddable / in-app widget
10+ widget types
Email updates to subscribers
Digests on Scale
Business plan
Release emails & newsletters
Social auto-posts (X, LinkedIn)
Reposts title + link
X & LinkedIn
AI blog post generation
Slack publishing
Via integrations ($20/mo each on Essentials)
Custom tone & voice
Inline AI tone actions
Content Guide + tone actions
Analytics
RSS / Atom feed
API access
GraphQL + MCP server
Business plan
REST API + MCP server
Feedback collection & voting
Growth plan and up
Core product
Public roadmap

What is AnnounceKit?

AnnounceKit bundles the whole announcement-delivery toolkit: a hosted changelog with custom domain and multi-language support, more than ten in-app widget styles (badges, popups, sidebars, top bars, modals), email updates with automated digests, user segmentation, feature-request boards with voting, a customizable roadmap with Jira sync, and NPS surveys. An official MCP server even lets your own AI agents draft and publish posts.

Its AI is an editor assistant: describe the update and it generates polished draft alternatives, with inline grammar, tone, and translation actions. Social integrations auto-repost the announcement title and link to X, LinkedIn, or Facebook when you publish — republishing, not per-channel copywriting — and there's no git or GitHub source integration beyond Zapier.

Pricing: AnnounceKit uses flat per-project pricing. Essentials is $79/month billed annually ($89 monthly) but includes only one team member. Growth is $129/$149 with segmentation, feature requests, custom domain, and unlimited team members. Scale is $339/$399 adding boosters, in-app notifications, multi-language, and SSO, with Enterprise custom above that. NPS is a paid add-on, there's a 15-day full-featured trial, and branding removal is Enterprise-only.

Where AnnounceKit shines

  • Ten-plus in-app widget formats — the broadest display toolkit in the category
  • Flat per-project pricing that doesn't scale with your audience size
  • Feedback boards, roadmap with Jira sync, and NPS in the same platform
  • Automated email digests (weekly through yearly) and user segmentation
  • Official MCP server plus GraphQL API and many SDKs
  • Auto-reposts announcements to X, LinkedIn, and Facebook on publish

Where AnnounceKit falls short

  • No content generation from git — AI drafts start from a description you write
  • Social auto-posting shares the title and link; it doesn't write channel-specific copy
  • Entry plan is single-seat ($79–89/month for one user); segmentation and feedback need Growth ($129+)
  • No free plan, and removing AnnounceKit branding requires the Enterprise tier
  • Changelog and announcements only — no blog, KB, or newsletter content generation

What is Olvy?

Olvy leads with feedback: a unified inbox that pulls user feedback from Slack, Discord, X, Telegram, the Play Store, Zendesk, Intercom, and email, then applies AI for sentiment, thematic analysis, auto-categorization, and summaries — plus 'Ask Olvy' conversational querying. The changelog side gives you a hosted release-notes page on a custom domain, in-app widgets, scheduled releases, per-release analytics, and automated release emails on the Business plan.

Its AI release writer generates copy from context you type or from linked resolved issues — there's no git or GitHub pipeline, and no social auto-posting (X appears only as a feedback source). After a near-shutdown in late 2024, Olvy was acquired by Amoeboids in early 2025 and is actively maintained, with the roadmap tilting further toward feedback, NPS, and surveys.

Pricing: Olvy's free plan covers one builder, unlimited release notes, and feedback analysis on up to 25 items. Essentials is $60/month for one builder, but integrations cost an extra $20/month each and extra builders $25/month. Business is $240/month with 5 builders, 10,000 feedback items, unlimited integrations, changelog email subscriptions, and API access, with a custom Enterprise tier above.

Where Olvy shines

  • Deep AI feedback analysis: sentiment, themes, auto-categorization, summaries, and conversational querying
  • Feedback ingestion from many sources — Slack, Discord, X, Telegram, Play Store, Zendesk, Intercom
  • Hosted changelog with custom domain, widgets, scheduling, and per-release analytics
  • AI release writer with tone controls and a Content Guide for consistent voice
  • Free plan includes unlimited release notes

Where Olvy falls short

  • No generation from git commits or GitHub activity — AI writes from typed context or linked issues
  • No social auto-posting; X is a feedback source, not a publishing channel
  • Integrations cost $20/month each below the $240/month Business plan
  • Changelog email subscriptions and API access are gated to Business
  • Feedback-first roadmap — the changelog is a secondary module, and the product was nearly sunset before its 2025 acquisition by Amoeboids

Which should you choose?

Choose AnnounceKit if you want the widest set of in-app widget formats plus feedback boards and NPS under flat per-project pricing, and you're happy writing the updates yourself. Choose Olvy if your bigger problem is feedback overload — collecting it from Slack, Discord, app stores, and support tools and having AI find the themes — and release notes are the closing step. And if the real bottleneck is writing the updates at all, consider Shipstar — it drafts changelogs, release notes, social posts, and newsletters straight from your GitHub activity and publishes them from one approval, starting free.

Or skip the writing entirely with Shipstar

Both AnnounceKit and Olvy still expect someone to sit down and write each update. Shipstar starts one step earlier: it connects to your GitHub repositories, reads what actually shipped, and drafts the changelog, release notes, social posts, and newsletter for you. You review and approve — Shipstar publishes to your changelog page, email subscribers, Slack, X, and LinkedIn from one approval.

It starts free (no credit card), and the Solo plan is Solo from $20/mo — a fraction of what most product communication platforms charge.

Frequently asked questions

What is the difference between AnnounceKit and Olvy?

AnnounceKit is a product-communication platform centered on making sure users see your updates — ten-plus widget formats, segmentation, email digests, feedback boards, and NPS, with flat per-project pricing. Olvy is an AI-powered user-feedback platform (now owned by Amoeboids) where changelogs and release notes are one module of a broader feedback-analysis suite. In practice, AnnounceKit is the better fit for SaaS product and customer-success teams that want widgets, targeting, feedback, and NPS bundled in one flat-priced tool, while Olvy suits product managers who want to centralize and AI-analyze user feedback, with a changelog to close the loop.

Does AnnounceKit have AI features?

Yes — an AI post generator that drafts announcement alternatives from a description you provide, inline editor actions for grammar, tone, and translation, and an official MCP server that lets AI agents read your changelog and draft or publish posts. It does not generate content from git commits or GitHub activity.

How much does AnnounceKit cost?

Flat per-project pricing: Essentials at $79/month billed annually ($89 monthly, one team member), Growth at $129/$149, Scale at $339/$399, and custom Enterprise. NPS is a paid add-on. There's a 15-day full-featured trial but no permanent free plan.

Is Olvy still active?

Yes. Olvy's team announced a sunset in late 2024, but the product was acquired by Amoeboids in early 2025 and continues as a standalone product with regular releases. Its recent roadmap emphasizes feedback analysis, NPS, and surveys more than changelog features.

How much does Olvy cost?

Olvy has a free plan (1 builder, unlimited release notes, 25 feedback items/month). Essentials is $60/month, but each integration is an extra $20/month and extra builders $25/month. Business is $240/month with unlimited integrations, changelog email subscriptions, and API access.

Which should I choose: AnnounceKit or Olvy?

Choose AnnounceKit if you want the widest set of in-app widget formats plus feedback boards and NPS under flat per-project pricing, and you're happy writing the updates yourself. Choose Olvy if your bigger problem is feedback overload — collecting it from Slack, Discord, app stores, and support tools and having AI find the themes — and release notes are the closing step. And if the real bottleneck is writing the updates at all, consider Shipstar — it drafts changelogs, release notes, social posts, and newsletters straight from your GitHub activity and publishes them from one approval, starting free.

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