Your client keeps saying 'the thing near the top.' Give them a link and let them show you.
Paste your URL into Drafty and share one link. Your client clicks the exact element — the hero, the CTA, the nav — and leaves a note pinned right there. No screenshots, no red circles, no email thread where the feedback is three replies deep. On their phone or desktop, no account required.
The feedback you're getting today
Scattered across chat — 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.”
How it works
Drop in your URL, share the link
Paste the live site — staging URL, custom domain, anything public. Drafty wraps it in a review board and gives you a shareable link. Send it to your client the same way you'd share a Google Doc.
Client clicks the exact spot
They hover any element on the page, click once, and leave a note pinned right there. The CTA, the hero image, the footer copy — each comment is anchored to the element, not floating in an email thread.
You resolve each note on the same link
Every comment is threaded and timestamped. Reply to confirm you understood, push the fix, resolve the thread. The client sees the update on the same URL they already have — no re-sending files.
Why people switch
- Client sends a screenshot with a red circle and no context
- Revision requests scattered across email, iMessage, and a voice note
- Client won't create an account or install an extension to leave feedback
- Element-anchored comments — Each note is pinned to the exact element — no guessing what they meant
- One threaded review board per site — All feedback in one place, resolved or open, nothing lost between threads
- Guest commenting on a shared link — They open the link, click the element, type a note — no signup, no download
Who it's for
Send the staging link as a Drafty review instead of a Loom. The client comments on the exact button — not a cropped screenshot with arrows.
Share the live site before the sign-off call. Stakeholders leave notes on the exact copy blocks — you walk in with a resolved list, not a to-do you transcribed from a recording.
Send testers a review link a week before launch. They comment on what's confusing — you fix it before strangers see it.
Questions
- Does my client need to create an account to leave feedback?
- No. They open the link and comment as a guest — no signup, no login, no extension to install. Works on their phone or desktop.
- Can I get my website reviewed for free?
- Yes — you can publish your first Drafty canvas and collect comments for free. No card required to start.
- How do I share my website with a client for review?
- Paste the URL into Drafty, copy the review link, and send it however you'd normally contact them — email, iMessage, Slack. They open it in any browser and comment directly on the page.
- What if my site is on a staging URL?
- Paste the staging URL — Drafty wraps whatever URL you give it. For password-protected staging, share the link with reviewers who already have staging access.
- Can multiple people review my website at the same time?
- Yes. Everyone uses the same link — comments land in one shared thread. You see who said what, anchored to the exact element.
- How is this different from just sending a screenshot?
- Screenshots lose the element. Drafty pins each comment to the exact spot on the live, interactive page — so "make the CTA stand out" is anchored to the button itself, not described next to a cropped image.
Keep exploring
Share a link. Get comments on the page.
Free to start. No account for reviewers. Works on any device.


