Show what you mean

Stop writing paragraphs that get misinterpreted. Draw on the page. Describe the change. See it happen.

The feedback loop is broken

You know what you want. You can picture it. But writing a ticket that a developer will read and interpret correctly? That's where it falls apart.

"Can we make the button more prominent?" Three rounds of back-and-forth. "The spacing feels off" becomes a guessing game. Screenshots with arrows help, but there's still room for misreading.

You end up on calls explaining what you meant. Or you approve something that's not quite right because you're tired of the revision cycle.

How it works

Open the Chrome extension on staging. Draw on the element you want changed. Type what you want. The AI shows you the change on the actual page.

Not right? Adjust your description and preview again. When it matches what you pictured, submit. Your dev team gets a pull request with the exact change you approved.

No more "that's not what I meant."

What PMs use this for

Work with engineering, not around them

Every change still goes through code review. Developers see what's being modified and can approve, adjust, or push back. You're giving them a head start on the implementation.

Questions

Is this just for copy?

No. Spacing, colors, images, layout. If you can point at it and describe what you want, Intentify can generate the change.

What if I don't know the technical terms?

You don't need them. "Make this button bigger" works. "Add more space between these sections" works. The AI figures out the code.

Can I use this on production?

You can annotate anywhere, but we recommend staging. Changes go through your normal deployment process either way.

What frameworks?

React, Vue, Next.js, Svelte, plain HTML. If your site is in GitHub, it probably works.

Ready to end the feedback loop?

Create your free account and submit your first change today.

Get Started Free

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