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.
Turn it into a shareable link in three steps
- Copy the full HTML the AI generated.
- Open ShareMyPage, create a new page, and paste it in.
- 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:
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.