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r/webdesignu/Quirky-Pollution-9306 months agoPosts

How do you get clear client feedback without endless revisions?

90% match
I’ve noticed that a lot of design feedback comes in vague messages like “make it pop” or “something feels off,” and it usually leads to multiple revision rounds. I’m curious how other designers handle this especially when feedback comes from non designers. Do you have a system that keeps feedback specific and prevents scope creep, or is this just part of the job?
vague client feedback
r/webdesignu/No_Bar_1629a year agoPosts

Markup.io Alternatives

85% match
We use markup[dot]io for our clients to review their websites once they are done.
It's a good service, definitely worth the $25 per month we pay.
Today I got an email from them saying they are increasing their price to $79 per month.
We don't push a large enough volume of designs through to justify that cost.
I have found a few alternatives, I will list here, but wanted to hear of your experiences with these, or other similar services.
https://ruttl\[dot\]com
https://usepastel\[dot\]com
https://bugherd\[dot\]com
https://atarim\[dot\]io (This one seems to get close to that pricepoint depending on what you need)
Thanks for your ideas and help!
markup alternative
r/webflowu/Bearded_web_designer2 years agoPosts

Best collab / feedback tool? Markup.io alternative?

85% match
What is your preferred tool for annotation / feedback? Currently we're using Markup which is priced pretty high at 30/month. for sites that aren't live and in design phase, we use Figjam/Figma but once the site is live then we have to switch tools to Markup for ongoing changes etc. Any alternatives? I see Punchlist but thats priced even higher.
markup alternative
r/marketingu/andre_manoel4 years agoPosts

Approval platform - Help

85% match
Hello folks I’m searching for a system that could help my team’s workflow. Me and my boss are both responsible for approving creative assets from a multitude of partners. We receive banners, e-mails, videos, scripts and other medias on a daily basis from a multitude of different partners and mkt agencies. I was wondering if there was a platform I could give people access and they would upload the things they wanna approve with us and I could have a visual overview of what I have left to approve, write the feedback and search for previous approved arts. Right now I receive a lot of e-mails and sometimes we get lost.
filestage alternative
r/webdesignu/jiraiya_jr4 months agoPosts

Found a nice free alternative to MarkUp for website feedback

69% match
https://vynl.in a simple tool to collect feedback on websites and UI designs. It’s basically a visual review tool similar to MarkUp, but free. Currently running a BETA program too , where you get it for free for an year 😎 It has features like: You can review live websites by just pasting the URL Supports pin comments and box annotations (first time looking this idea, great for marking sections) Comment threads stay attached to the exact element Works with uploaded images/screenshots too Has revision tracking so feedback across versions stays organized Real-time updates when multiple people are reviewing The setup is pretty simple — create a project, add the website or images, and share it with clients or teammates. If you already use tools like MarkUp or Pastel for design feedback, this might be worth checking out as a free option.
markup alternative
r/Designu/Weekendwatch34962 months agoPosts

Why do clients give such vague feedback on designs?

65% match
Something that comes up quite often during discussions. You show a design and instead of clear feedback, you hear things like “something feels off” or “not sure about this part,” but they can’t really explain why. It’s not like they don’t have an opinion. It just feels like they can’t fully put it into words. Most of the time, once things are shown more clearly or from a different angle, the feedback suddenly becomes more specific and easier to work with. Feels like the issue isn’t always the design, but how well someone is able to understand what they’re looking at. Curious how others deal with this.
vague client feedback
r/webdesignu/ifstatementequalsAI2 months agoPosts

Freelance web designers, what's your process for collecting client feedback?

60% match
A question for web designers who work as freelancers and who can maybe help a beginner freelancer out. I primarily work with clients who aren't good at giving solid feedback. I can't blame them since they aren't in a creative field themselves, so I also spend time figuring out what they actually mean by the feedback they're giving and have to chase them to get more direction about what they meant. Many of my clients often do not have time to go through the design together, either because they are busy themselves or because it's inconvenient for me at that moment as I am occupied with other things. As a result, the feedback sessions often run asynchronously. How do you handle: - Vague reactions that need three follow-up messages to decode - Multiple stakeholders who contradict each other - Decisions from week three getting questioned in week seven What's your process? I genuinely want to know if there's a better way or if this is just the job.
vague client feedback
r/graphic_designu/Individual-Slide-3777 months agoPosts

vague feedback is the bane of my existence

60% match
(it’s friday in my time zone) this also applies to client feedback - getting some decent, workable critique feels like pulling teeth. just some examples of the "feedback" i get on a near-daily basis : "make it better" "better it" "it looks off, please rework" "not working" 🥲
vague client feedback
r/smallbusinessu/Connect_Winter48304 months agoPosts

(Webdevelopers) Client website feedback is chaotic — how do you handle revisions?

55% match
I keep running into the same problem: client feedback arrives scattered across emails, screenshots, and spreadsheets — and half of it is vague or missing context. We were using Excel/Google Sheets for revision lists, but it was clunky, so I ended up building a lightweight visual feedback tool for web projects where clients can click on the page and leave comments in context (made it for my own workflow first). Not trying to spam — genuinely validating: is this a common pain for you too, or do you already have a process/tool that solves it?
What’s your best method for keeping client feedback structured and unambiguous?
(If people are curious I can share details, but mainly here for the workflow discussion.)
vague client feedback
r/ContentCreatorsu/uncledemmy_a month agoPosts

Client feedback on video edits is driving me crazy. How do you all manage this without losing your minds?

52% match
Hey everyone. I'm trying to figure out a better way to handle the back-and-forth when sending video drafts to clients. Right now, my feedback loop is a chaotic mix of Slack messages, long emails with confusing timestamps, and vague texts.
I need to streamline this before it burns me out. I'm curious,
How do you currently handle video/content delivery and gather client notes? What apps or services make this easier for you? I’m honestly at the point where I'd happily pay for a tool if it actually works and doesn't confuse the client. Are there any paid solutions you swear by? Would love to hear what your workflows look like!
vague client feedback
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