drafty

Miro is your team's whiteboard. Drafty is your client's feedback link.

When you need a client to review a doc, a design export, or a live page, Miro is the wrong tool — they land in an infinite whiteboard built for your internal team. Drafty turns the artifact into a link: they open it, tap the exact spot, leave a note. No account, no canvas to navigate.

Just a linkNo whiteboardAny artifact
drafty.im/canvas/brand-guidev1v2
Brand guide
the tagline feels a bit flat — can we punch it up?
claude code
$ drafty comments inbox
the tagline feels a bit flat — can we punch it up?· Brand guide
✦ Claude is working…
pushed v2 — same link · thread resolved
Your client reads the doc and pins the note right to the line — not a sticky note on an infinite whiteboard.

The feedback you're getting today

Scattered across iMessage and Slack — every note a guess at which version, which element.

Maya (client)
Today 4:12 PM
saw the landing page, looks great 🙌
can you make the logo bigger though
which one — header or footer?
this one
that's the old version 😅 are you on the link I sent, or a screenshot?
…the screenshot

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 Miro

What each is actually built for — so you pick by the reviewer you're sending it to.

What your client needs DraftyMiro
Client comments with no account or signup
Works on docs, PDFs, Figma exports, and live URLsboards only
Share one link — nothing else to navigate
Anchored comment pinned to the exact elementsticky notes, not anchored
Threaded resolve / reopen per comment
Internal team workshops, retrospectives, roadmaps

How it works

01

Share the artifact, not the workspace

Push your doc, PDF, or design export to Drafty. Your client gets one link that opens straight to the artifact — no whiteboard, no team canvas to orient themselves in.

.html.md
drafty.im/x9k
02

They pin the note to the exact spot

Hover any element, click, type. The comment is anchored to that line or section — not a floating sticky note that drifts. No account, no app to download.

03

Claude ships the edit on the same link

Read the pinned threads in your terminal. Claude makes the change and pushes a new version on the same URL — the client sees the update without getting a new link.

we are really very goodfaster, every loop
make it punchier

Why people switch

The old way
  • Client opens your Miro link and gets lost in the whiteboard
  • Miro prompts the client to sign up or join the team
  • Sticky notes drift — feedback isn't tied to the specific line
With Drafty
  • Single-artifact link with no canvas to navigateThey land on the doc or design — nothing else on screen
  • Guest commenting — no account, no seat costOne click to comment, from any browser or phone
  • Element-anchored commentsEvery note is pinned to exactly what they meant

Who it's for

Freelance designer

Send the brand doc as a link. The client annotates the exact paragraph — not a sticky note floating somewhere on an infinite board.

Solo consultant

The strategy deck is a link. Your client marks up the exact slide — and it still looks like your work, not a team whiteboard tool.

Indie builder

Drop the spec doc in a Drafty link. Early reviewers comment without signing up — every note is threaded and anchored.

Questions

Do clients need a Miro account to leave feedback?
On Miro's free and Starter plans, external guests have limited access. Unlimited guest collaboration requires the Business plan. With Drafty, guests comment on any plan with no account at all.
What is Miro actually built for?
Miro is built for internal team collaboration — sprint retrospectives, product roadmaps, design workshops, and cross-functional planning. It's a powerful team workspace, not a client-review tool.
Can I collect client feedback without Miro?
Yes. Tools like Drafty are built specifically for designer-to-client review: one link, anchored comments on the exact element, no account required. Miro is better suited to your internal team.
How is Drafty different from Miro for client feedback?
Miro puts your client in an infinite whiteboard built for team workshops — they have to find the artifact and drop a sticky note. Drafty is just the artifact on a link; they tap the exact spot and leave an anchored comment.
Is there a Miro alternative that doesn't require a team account?
Yes. Drafty lets anyone comment as a guest — no Miro team to join, no seat charge, no whiteboard to orient in. Share the link; they comment in one tap.
Does Miro work for sharing a doc or PDF with a client?
Miro lets you upload files onto a board, but the client still lands in the whiteboard workspace rather than the document itself. Drafty renders the doc or PDF as the entire page — it's what they see when the link opens.

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.