Feature

An alternative to email hell

November 20

Feedback, it's a blessing and a curse. Every web designer and developer knows that at some point you need to get feedback from your team and your client during website development. The problem is the countless ways that feedback is sent: emails, spreadsheets, text messages, project management software. Once you ask for feedback you spend all of your valuable time trying to manage it instead of doing something useful with it.

"The alternative is email hell or having really shoddy communication. I can trace just about every client problem I've ever had down to poor communication, and any tools or processes in place to counter that are a win in my book."

The problem isn't the feedback, the problem is a lack of good, easy to use tools to leave and manage the feedback.

A 2011 survey of web developers and designers* found that more than 55 percent of respondents didn't use any bug-tracking or issue-management systems when dealing with client feedback. When asked which tools they used to track issues, 44 percent responded that they used tools such as Basecamp or Google Docs.

Fortunately for developers there are an increasing number of web-based bug trackers which are better suited to the needs of web developers and designers. Unfortunately those solutions still tend to require a technical background and are not easy enough for non technical users.

I recently posed the following question to a group of web professionals. "Do you use software to allow clients to leave feedback and track issues during development and reviews on web projects?"

Most of the respondents answered that they use software to facilitate feedback, however all of the responses stated the biggest problem was getting clients to use the systems they implemented.

"Most clients don't want to learn a new system – they have enough software as it is."
"You have to recognize that the client will never change their process to yours (at least not until you prove the value)."
"I made several different attempts using a variety of bug and issue trackers, but almost every time ended up using a shared Google Docs Spreadsheet with tasks and milestones stated with due by dates and completed dates ... I typically did screen shots and cobbled them together into a PDF and then marked them up using Acrobat."

The question is not do you see value in using software to track issues and feedback with clients but rather how do you get clients to leave feedback in the software you chose?

The answer to this question is PageProofer. It was created to solve this problem. It makes leaving and managing feedback easy for everyone.

  • It takes just three clicks for your clients can leave feedback and comments directly on the website from any browser or device.
  • Your team is instantly notified of any feedback left on the page. With 3rd party integration ** notes can be automatically added to your project management or bug tracking software.
  • You can see where the problem is on the web page with a marker placed exactly where the issue was seen.
  • Browser, device and screen information is recorded on every note making it easier for your team to resolve the problem.

We developed PageProofer to be as easy as possible for anyone use.

“PageProofer is a fantastic tool for our development toolbox. It gives us and our clients one simplified point for feedback creation, tracking, and sign-off.”
quote from Joe grassia Joe @ Atomic Mouse
“Making PageProofer a part of our process has made our project process easier to document and hand off. Projects are more enjoyable to work on, and it has improved our profitability on web projects. A simple tool can make a big difference!”
quote from Mike sallander Mike @ Antenna

PageProofer makes it simple to manage visual feedback.

Try it for free