Comparison
ReqBrief vs Google Forms for Client Intake: A Practical Comparison
Google Forms is free and everywhere. The question is whether a static form ever gets you a brief you can scope from.
Google Forms is the default for a reason: it is free, everyone has a Google account, and you can spin up a form in minutes. For collecting a few simple facts, it is hard to beat.
Requirement gathering is a different job. Clients face a wall of open-ended boxes, write "make it modern" in three of them, and leave the rest blank. You are left with answers that raise more questions than they settle. ReqBrief replaces that wall of fields with a guided conversation and returns a structured brief.
ReqBrief vs Google Forms, side by side
| ReqBrief | Google Forms | |
|---|---|---|
| Price | Free during early access | Free |
| Core format | Adaptive AI interview | Static form, all questions at once |
| Handling vague answers | Follows up automatically | Accepts whatever is typed |
| Output | Structured project brief | A spreadsheet of responses |
| Client experience | Feels like a conversation | Feels like homework |
| Reusing client context | Shared context across projects | None |
| Best at | Defining a project scope | Quick, simple data collection |
When Google Forms is the better choice
- You only need a few simple, well-defined fields (name, date, a choice or two).
- Budget is zero and the form is genuinely throwaway.
- You live inside Google Workspace and want responses in Sheets.
Where ReqBrief wins
- Open-ended questions keep coming back vague or half-answered.
- You want a brief produced for you, not a sheet to interpret.
- You want the questions to adapt to each client instead of one rigid list.
- You want past context with a returning client to carry over automatically.
The bottom line
Google Forms is great for collecting simple facts. For defining a project — where the follow-up question matters more than the first answer — a static form is the wrong tool, and that is the gap ReqBrief fills.
FAQ
Is ReqBrief free like Google Forms?
ReqBrief is free during early access. Unlike Google Forms, it runs an adaptive interview and produces a finished brief rather than a raw response sheet.
Why not just add more questions to my Google Form?
More questions usually means lower completion and shallower answers — a longer form feels like more homework. ReqBrief asks one question at a time and only digs deeper where an answer is unclear, which keeps clients engaged and the brief complete.
Keep exploring
Other comparisons
ReqBrief vs Notion intake
A Notion template looks organised. But it is still a page of fields the client has to fill in alone.
ReqBrief vs PDF/email questionnaire
The emailed questionnaire is the status quo at most agencies. It is also the thing clients most often ignore.
ReqBrief vs Jotform
Jotform can build almost any form. The question is whether a form — however capable — ever gets you a brief you can scope from.
ReqBrief for your team
Related reading
7 Questions to Ask Clients Before Starting a Project (That Most Kickoffs Miss)
Seven questions to ask clients before starting a project, covering hidden stakeholders, sign-off, integrations, and what done actually looks like to them.
Project Brief Example: 3 Complete, Filled-Out Briefs You Can Copy
See what a real project brief looks like: three complete, filled-out examples (bakery site, booking platform, internal tool) you can copy and adapt today.
Stop chasing clients for requirements
Create a project, send a link, and let ReqBrief interview your client and write the brief.
Try ReqBrief free →