Send a tracked link with your proposal or deliverable. Get notified the moment your client opens it. Certainty, not silence. Free forever.
You send the proposal. Then you wait. No "got it." No "looks great." Just your inbox, refreshing itself.
Did they open it? Did it land in spam? Are they sharing it with their team or ignoring it entirely?
40–60% of qualified B2B opportunities die to "no decision" — not to a competitor, but to silence. Because nobody built a feedback loop for the moment between sending and knowing.
Reliability isn't visible until it's missing. This is the missing piece.
PDF, Google Doc, Figma export, Dropbox link — whatever you already use. No editor, no reformatting. Your proposal stays yours.
Your client gets a clean page with your deliverable. No login required. No account needed. One click and they're reading.
Get an email the moment they open it. That's it. The uncertainty ends. Your follow-up has timing now.
PDFs, Google Docs, Figma links, Canva exports, Loom videos. If you can link it or upload it, we can track it.
"Sarah just opened your proposal." First name, document title, timestamp. The exhale you've been waiting for.
No login. No app. No account. Your client clicks the link and sees their deliverable. That's it.
Your client clicks "Looks Good" and creates an approval on record. In payment disputes, that timestamp matters.
Require you to build proposals in their editor
$10–$65/month per seat
Built for teams of 10+
CRM integrations you'll never use
Enterprise bot detection overhead
Works with the files you already have
Free forever for open tracking
Built for a team of one
One link, one notification, one answer
Outcomes without the overhead
No trial. No credit card. No catch.
The moment of certainty is the value. Everything else just delivers it. Start free.
Upload, share, know. Here's exactly what happens when you send a tracked link.
DocSend proved document tracking is worth $165M. But it was built for the wrong workflow.
Every ghosting guide starts at Step 1. There should be a Step 0: did they even open the file?