Trusted by leading SaaS teams.

Beamer in-app messages

Reach users where they are

In-app widget and email notifications ensure customers never miss what’s new. Schedule posts, pin important updates, and highlight what matters.

Target the right audience

Segment by plan, role, behavior, or URL context so every announcement is relevant. Reduce noise, boost engagement.

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Turn updates into insights

Collect reactions, comments, and quick feedback directly on every announcement to see what resonates, discover potential issues early, and guide your next move.

Find out what your users want

Capture ideas and requests, validate demand, and prioritize confidently with a public roadmap and feedback portal.

feedback on public roadmap enabled by Beamer
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Collect and act on NPS feedback

Measure customer loyalty right inside your product with built-in NPS surveys. Trigger surveys at the perfect time, segment responses by audience, and understand what’s driving promoters or detractors.

POV: You’re a Beamer Customer

520%

Return on investment (ROI)

3x

Improvement in user engagement

180%

Increase in new feature adoption

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Paolo Sabatinelli

Chief Product Officer at Immobiliare.it

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“Before Beamer, our product update emails were getting below 50% open rates and adoption of our new features was low. Using Beamer to replace email, we immediately saw 30% higher adoption with 50% less effort!

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Louisa Ive

Sr. Product Marketing Manager at Patchwork

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“We use Beamer for every single marketing and product update campaign we run because we know it gives us 3X the engagement rate of email with less than half the effort.

Today, a growing number of archivists, designers, and nostalgia-seekers are turning to a specific search term to revisit this era: This search isn't just about looking at old photos; it is about accessing a digital time capsule that captures the precise moment when youth culture, technology, and celebrity collided.

However, this was also the decade the internet began to eat the world. By the mid-2000s, blogs like Perez Hilton and early social media platforms like MySpace were challenging the gatekeeping power of major publications.

In this deep dive, we explore the phenomenon of digitizing 2000s periodicals, why the PDF format has become the standard for preserving this era, and the unique cultural value found within these digital pages. To understand the current demand for 2000s magazines in PDF format, one must understand the media landscape of that decade. The 2000s were a liminal space in publishing. Magazines were still the primary arbiters of culture. If Teen Vogue declared pink was the color of the season, stores across America stocked pink. If Blender or Spin put a band on the cover, they sold millions of records.

The early 2000s were a chaotic, glittering, and transformative era. It was a time when low-rise jeans fought for dominance against bootcut denim, when flip phones were the height of technology, and when the "It Girl" reigned supreme. But beyond the fashion and the gadgets, the 2000s represented the final golden age of print media before the smartphone revolution changed everything.

When you open a , you are looking at an industry in transition. You see the polished, high-gloss photography of the 90s merging with the chaotic, "more is more" aesthetic of the internet age. You see advertisements for iPods next to advertisements for landline phones. It is a fascinating study of a society pivoting from analog to digital. The Aesthetic of the "Noughties" One of the primary reasons for the high volume of searches for "2000s magazines PDF" is the revival of Y2K aesthetics. Gen Z and younger Millennials have rediscovered the fashion sensibilities of the early 2000s, bringing back butterfly clips, velour tracksuits, and distinct typography.

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