A Typeform alternative for answers that need follow-up.
Typeform collects responses. Lemma runs adaptive AI voice forms that ask useful follow-up questions, then turn what people say into transcripts, themes, quotes, and decision-ready reports.
Static forms
Capture the first answer.
A respondent picks an option or fills a text box. The row is clean, but the reason, example, tradeoff, and next step are often missing.
Lemma voice forms
Ask the next useful question.
Lemma adapts to each answer, probes for the missing context, and produces report-style outputs your team can actually use.

Use Lemma when the form would be too shallow.
Lemma is not trying to be a prettier form builder. It replaces Typeform when the answer matters enough that your team needs the reason, example, objection, and action behind it.
Customer feedback and churn follow-up
Ask why a score changed, what happened, what they expected instead, and what your team should fix first.
Lead qualification and demo requests
Capture use case, urgency, constraints, buying context, and the real reason someone wants to talk.
Customer story and proof intake
Collect the examples, outcomes, before-and-after detail, and quotes that static forms rarely produce.
Typeform vs Lemma
Is Lemma a full Typeform replacement?
Lemma is best as a Typeform alternative when the job is qualitative: customer feedback, churn follow-up, lead qualification, story intake, research, and other workflows where the first answer is too shallow. If you need every form-builder input type, design control, or operational form workflow, Typeform may still be the better tool.
Can I import an existing Typeform?
Not as a one-click import. The practical workflow is to recreate the important questions, then let Lemma ask adaptive follow-up questions that a static form would miss.
What does the respondent do?
They open a Lemma link and answer by voice. Lemma guides a short conversation, adapts to what they say, and probes for reasons, examples, objections, and next steps.
What does the team get?
Transcripts, summaries, themes, quotes, and report-style outputs grounded in what respondents actually said.