What’s on sale, and what’s in review
Klem HQ is a one-person studio. We make small, opinionated software for teams on collaboration platforms, and we sell it in two places.
The first place is the Atlassian Marketplace. That is where our first product, PageKeeper, currently sits in review, waiting for the listing team’s verdict. PageKeeper is a small Confluence app that quietly archives stale pages nobody has read in months. It was submitted on 2026-05-03, and we are waiting for it to go live.
The second place is Gumroad. As of this week, four small digital products are on sale there, all priced at $39 with a seven-day no-questions refund. Each one sat alongside the Marketplace software in our planning notes for months. Each one finally got finished this week, because two tracks are better than one when only one of them has a long external review cycle.
This post is a short list of what is on sale today, what is in review, and what comes next.
What’s on sale
Four products, $39 each, seven-day no-questions refund on all of them.
The Indie Forge Developer Playbook. An 82-page PDF for solo and small-team developers shipping their first Atlassian Cloud app. Nine chapters drawn from shipping PageKeeper. The space between the official Forge documentation and a paid Marketplace listing.
klemhq.gumroad.com/l/forge-playbookThe Customer Support Triage Roadmap. A single self-contained HTML template for solo founders or two-to-five-person ops leads handling support without a dedicated team. Five phases from a flooded inbox to AI-assisted, human-approved triage.
klemhq.gumroad.com/l/customer-support-triageThe Inbox Zero Maintenance Roadmap. Same single-file format. Five phases for the knowledge worker buried under more than a hundred emails a day. Sort the inbound before you read it, batch your responses, and stop confusing presence in the inbox with progress.
klemhq.gumroad.com/l/inbox-zero-maintenanceThe Content Review Pipeline Roadmap. Same again. Five phases for the content lead or solo marketer shipping 5 to 20 pieces a month. AI line edits that do not flatten your voice, a human editorial gate, a writer return loop, and publish.
klemhq.gumroad.com/l/content-review-pipelineEvery template names what current AI tools can and cannot do as of mid-2026, with prompts, decision gates, and refund rights spelled out. No upsells. No email funnel. No sequel-of-the-week.
You can preview each template before buying at klemhq.com/workflows.
What’s in review
PageKeeper is currently with Atlassian’s Marketplace listing team. Submitted 2026-05-03, currently in queue. Once it goes live, customers find it inside their own Atlassian workspace and install it in one click. Pricing is per-user per-month, with a free tier up to five users.
If you have not met PageKeeper yet, the product page walks through what it does. The earlier post why your Confluence wiki is going to seed is the long-form version of the problem PageKeeper exists to solve.
Why two tracks
The reason we ship Gumroad goods alongside Marketplace software is straightforward. A Marketplace listing has a long review cycle, a narrow per-app discoverability surface, and a slow ramp from listing to first paying customer. A Gumroad good ships in a day, reaches the open web, and validates the studio’s voice with a much shorter feedback loop.
The two tracks compound. The Forge Developer Playbook is born directly from shipping PageKeeper, and will get patched as PageKeeper itself learns more about the Marketplace lifecycle. The three AI Workflow Templates carry the studio’s calm voice into a market that has nothing to do with Atlassian, which lets us hear from buyers we would otherwise never reach.
Both tracks share the same constraints. No exclamation marks. No emoji in product surfaces. No engagement bait. Calm, opinionated software and writing for teams who are tired of dashboards screaming for attention.
What’s next
Three product families are in design.
Keeper. Lifecycle and cleanup tools. PageKeeper just shipped. IssueKeeper for Jira is in Phase B internal development. SpaceKeeper, for Confluence space-level cleanup, is on the family roadmap behind IssueKeeper.
Quiet. Calm communication tools. Digest bots and standup silencers, for teams drowning in notification noise. None of these is committed; all of them are gated on revenue signal from the tools already on sale.
Sweep. Trust and hygiene tools. Link checkers and mention auditors, for workspaces where things rot quietly in the background. Same gating as Quiet.
Only PageKeeper is committed. Everything else is directional, and any of it can be dropped without apology if the existing products do not earn their keep.
If a Klem HQ product helped you ship something this week, or if it did not, we would like to hear about it. Reply to your Gumroad receipt or write to [email protected]. The studio motto is still quiet tools for noisy work.