Your client sent a screenshot with a red circle. There's a better way to collect visual feedback.
A visual feedback tool lets reviewers click the exact element they mean and leave a note pinned to it — on a design, a live site, or a document. No email thread. No "the bit near the logo". Share one link; they comment in any browser with no account.
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
Share one link
Drop your design, document, or live site into Drafty. You get a link that opens in any browser — nothing for your client to install or sign up for. Send it in an email, a text, a Slack message.
They click the exact spot
Your client hovers the headline, the logo, the paragraph they mean — clicks once, and types. The note anchors right there. No red circles on screenshots. No "the section near the top, I think the second one."
Every note in one thread
All their comments land in one place, pinned to the artifact. Reply, resolve, reopen. Push a new version on the same link when you're done — they see the change in context, anchored to the same spot.
Why people switch
- Client annotates a JPEG and emails it back — context is gone the moment they hit send
- Reviewers won't make an account just to leave two rounds of notes
- Round two references elements that moved since round one
- Comments anchored live to the design or document — Each note stays tied to the exact element, on the real artifact, not a flattened screenshot
- Guest commenting on a shareable link — They open the link and click to comment — no login, no extension, works on their phone
- Versioned review on the same link — Push a new version in place — old comments stay, new ones layer on top, same URL
Who it's for
Share a design link before the call. Your client marks the exact element — the meeting becomes decisions, not you trying to decode their email.
Send the deliverable as a Drafty link. The client annotates inline and you see every note pinned to the exact spot — not buried in a reply chain.
Drop a v0 prototype and get feedback from testers who won't create an account. Every note lands pinned to the screen they mean.
Questions
- What is a visual feedback tool?
- A visual feedback tool lets reviewers click an element on a design, website, or document and leave a note pinned right to it — instead of describing the spot in an email or circling a screenshot. Notes stay anchored across rounds of revision, visible to everyone on the shared link.
- How is visual feedback different from annotating a screenshot?
- A screenshot detaches from the artifact the moment it's taken — it goes stale with each revision and loses context in an email thread. Visual feedback pins the note to the actual element on the actual artifact, so the comment stays meaningful through round two.
- Do reviewers need an account to leave visual feedback?
- Not with Drafty. Your client opens the shared link in any browser, clicks the element, and types. No signup, no extension, no install — on desktop or their phone.
- What kinds of work can people give visual feedback on?
- Drafty works on designs (image exports, mockups), documents (proposals, copy drafts, PDFs), and live or staging websites — one tool for the range of things a designer typically shares with a client.
- Can multiple reviewers comment on the same artifact?
- Yes. Everyone uses the same link. Each person's notes anchor to their specific element in one shared thread — no reconciling separate email replies or chat messages.
- Which visual feedback tool is best for client sign-off?
- BugHerd and Usersnap are built for dev teams tracking bugs — strong at technical metadata and Jira routing. Drafty is built for designer-to-client handoff: no login required, any artifact, threaded replies instead of ticket-style reports.
Keep exploring
Share a link. Get comments on the page.
Free to start. No account for reviewers. Works on any device.


