Iris is the client delivery platform for creative professionals. Send your work as a cinematic full-screen experience: slides, document, or gallery. Clients leave pinned feedback directly on the work, exactly where it belongs. You see which slides they spent time on, which ones they skipped, and what they paid attention to. After every session, Iris reads the data and tells you what it means. No client login. No download. One link does everything. Free to start.
Hey Product Hunt
I built Iris because I was tired of sending great work through bad links.
As a designer, I'd spend weeks on a project, then send a Dropbox link and hope for the best. The client would open it between two notifications and come back with 'the thing on the right feels a bit off.' I had zero idea what they actually looked at.
So I built Iris.
With Iris you send work as a full-screen cinematic experience. Clients pin feedback directly on the work, exactly where it belongs. You see exactly what they paid attention to, slide by slide. After every session, Iris reads the behavioral data and tells you what it means before your next conversation.
Three display modes: Slides, Document, or Gallery. Four scenes. One link. No client login required.
It's live today and free to start. You can try the interactive demo on the site before signing up.
Would love your honest feedback, especially if you're a designer, photographer, or anyone who delivers creative work to clients.
What would make this a tool you'd actually use every day?
Axel, founder of Iris
What if you adjusted the feedback? Do you create a separate Vision or can you update your existing one?
I'm a designer myself and what clients also value is seeing the progress of their submitted feedback. The before/after effect.
I love the product btw. Gonna give it a try in the upcoming weeks.
The view tracking is the part that actually changes the dynamic. I've sent work over Google Drive and the worst part isn't bad feedback, it's wondering if they even opened it. Knowing what someone actually looked at before they respond gives you a completely different starting point for the conversation.
Pinned feedback is underrated. The usual flow - send work, client watches, you never know what they looked at - is just broken. Knowing they watched 30 seconds and stopped on slide 3 changes how you follow up entirely. Is the view tracking opt-in on the client side or does it happen automatically?
I checked out Iris and noticed some small glitches where comments might move around on different screens
I'd love to help you fix these so your clients' feedback is always 100% accurate.
I love the concept of pinned feedback right on the work. How do you ensure feedback is actionable for both sides?
@axeltdesign Getting precise feedback is always hard, especially when clients give very vague comments.
How easy is it for non-tech clients to start using it without needing explanations?
This looks really clean. I like the idea of seeing what people actually looked at rather than guessing. Do clients find it easy to use without needing any explanation?
Hey Axel, that line about spending weeks on a project and getting back the thing on the right feels a bit off is painfully accurate. Was there a specific client review where you realized they barely looked at the work you actually wanted feedback on?