Conceptboard is for brainstorming with your team. Drafty's for delivering work to your client.
When the project is done and you need a client's sign-off, a whiteboard is the wrong room. Drafty turns your doc, PDF, or live URL into a shareable page — your client opens the link, taps the exact spot, and leaves a note. No account, no workshop, no setup.
The feedback you're getting today
Scattered across iMessage and Slack — every note a guess at which version, which element.
Every message here is a comment that belonged on the artifact. In Drafty they tap the exact spot and the note pins there — threaded, on one link that's always the current version. No “which one,” no screenshots, no “FINAL.html.”
Drafty vs Conceptboard
What each is actually built for — so you pick by the reviewer you're sending it to.
| What your client needs | Drafty | |
|---|---|---|
| Client comments with no account and no setup | name required, limited role | |
| Send a doc, PDF, or Figma export as a review link | ||
| Anchored, threaded comments pinned to the exact element | ||
| Works on a live website URL | ||
| Infinite whiteboard for team brainstorming and ideation | ||
| Built-in templates, kanban, and design thinking workshops |
How it works
Push the deliverable and share the link
Drop your proposal, design brief, or live URL into Drafty. It becomes a page your client opens in any browser — no whiteboard to navigate, no account to create.
They pin a note to the exact spot
Your client hovers a paragraph, a section heading, or a button — clicks — and leaves a comment pinned right there. No screenshots, no 'the bit about pricing near the top.'
Claude ships the revision
Read the anchored notes in your terminal. Claude makes the edits and pushes a new version on the same link — the thread resolves, your client sees the update.
Why people switch
- Client gets a whiteboard link and doesn't know what to do with it
- Feedback arrives as 'I left some notes on the board' — scattered sticky notes with no context
- Conceptboard guest access limits clients to a restricted 'Reviewer' role
- A single-purpose review page for the deliverable — They open the link and see exactly what you sent — nothing else to click
- Element-anchored threaded comments — Every note is pinned to the exact line, with a thread to reply and resolve
- True guest commenting on a public link — One tap, on phone or desktop — no name form, no role to understand
Who it's for
Push the brand doc or proposal. The client annotates the exact section — not a sticky note lost on a 4,000px whiteboard.
The deliverable is a link. Your client reacts directly on the doc — it looks like your work, not a shared workshop tool.
Share the spec with a client for sign-off. They comment on the exact requirement — no workshop, no templates to navigate.
Questions
- Is Conceptboard good for getting client feedback on a finished design?
- Conceptboard is built for team brainstorming on an infinite canvas — it has templates, sticky notes, and kanban. For sending a finished deliverable to a client and getting pinned sign-off back, that's more than you need and less precise than you want.
- Does a client need an account to comment in Conceptboard?
- Conceptboard guests enter a name and join as Reviewers — a limited role with a restricted toolset. They're on a full whiteboard, not your deliverable. In Drafty, they open the link and comment on exactly what you sent, nothing else.
- Yes. Drafty turns any document, PDF, or Figma export into a review link. Your client sees the artifact, not a blank canvas — comments land pinned to the exact element.
- What does Conceptboard do that Drafty doesn't?
- Conceptboard has a full infinite whiteboard with design thinking templates, real-time team brainstorming, embedded task management, and kanban. If you're running a workshop or an internal ideation session, Conceptboard is the better tool.
- Can my client comment on a live website without an account?
- Yes. Paste the URL into Drafty and share the link — your client hovers any element, clicks, and leaves a pinned note. No account, no extension, no Conceptboard seat required.
- Is Drafty free to start?
- Yes. Publish your first canvas and collect guest comments at no cost — no card required.
Keep exploring
Send your next client a link, not a login.
Free to start. No card. They comment in one click — Claude ships the fix.


