July 6, 2026 · 2 min read

How to Send a Client Proposal as a Web Page (Not a PDF)

A proposal sent as a PDF lands in a downloads folder and never gets opened again. Here is how to send it as a web page with AI, and share it as a link clients actually read.

You spend hours on a proposal, export it to PDF, attach it to an email, and it lands in the client's downloads folder never to be opened again. A web page is a better format for the job: it opens on a phone the moment it arrives, you can update a price after sending without a confusing new attachment, and questions come back as comments instead of a buried reply. Here is how to build a client proposal as a page with AI and share it as a link.

Generate the proposal as one HTML page

Paste this into Claude, ChatGPT, or Gemini. It produces a single self-contained file, which is exactly what you need to publish it as a page:

Create a single self-contained HTML page for a client proposal. Include a cover section, the problem, our approach in three steps, scope and timeline, pricing options, and a sign off call to action. Polished, confident, agency-quality design. Everything inline. Give me the finished page as a downloadable .html file I can save.

You will get a complete page: a cover, the problem, a three-step approach, scope and timeline, pricing options, and a sign-off so the client can say yes right where they are reading. Tweak the wording to your engagement and regenerate until it fits.

  1. Copy the full HTML the AI generated.
  2. Open ShareMyPage, create a new page, and paste it in.
  3. Set the visibility, copy the link, and send it to the client.

The page is live at a clean URL, renders in a sandboxed frame, and stays editable so you can revise a price or a slide without resending anything. Here is what a finished proposal looks like as a page:

A client proposal shared on ShareMyPageOpen full page ↗

Keep it between you and the client

A proposal is not for the whole internet. Set the page to password protected so only your client can open it, and share the password through a separate channel. The link still updates in place, so a revised quote never means a new attachment.

Why a page wins the deal

A client opens the proposal on their phone the moment it arrives, with no download or app in the way. You can revise after sending without a round of confusing new files, and questions come back as comments right next to the line that raised them, instead of a vague email. Want to see more of what people share this way? Browse the examples gallery.

Sending a proposal soon? Create it as a page on ShareMyPage and share the link.