Annotix – Visual Website Feedback & Annotation
Annotix – Drag, Annotate, Feedback gives your team a way to annotate any page on the frontend, capture screenshots, track status, assign items, set priority, and collaborate through threaded replies – all without leaving the site. Built by Native Infotech. Demo video: https://youtu.be/VQssYhmuh0E Core Features Click-to-annotate – click anywhere on any page to drop a feedback pin. Area selection – drag to select a specific region of the page before capturing. Selection is draggable and resizable with corner handles. Cleaner screenshot selection – the Pins panel auto-hides shortly after feedback mode starts and shows a soft drag-to-select notice so screenshots are not blocked by the sidebar. Screenshot capture – optionally attach a viewport screenshot via bundled html2canvas. The library is lazy-loaded on demand for faster page loads. Screenshot format controls – choose JPEG or PNG output and set JPEG quality from the General settings tab. Annotation tools – draw arrows, rectangles, and circles over the selected area before saving. The arrow tool is selected by default for faster callouts. Markdown toolbar – format feedback descriptions with bold, italic, bullet lists, numbered lists, links, and inline code. Guest feedback link – allow clients without WordPress accounts to submit feedback through a private token URL. File attachments – upload images, PDFs, documents, spreadsheets, and other files alongside feedback. Attachments open in a new tab and display file-type badges. Priority levels – tag each feedback item as Urgent, High, Normal, or Low with colour-coded badges and dots. Assignment – assign feedback items to specific team members from a dropdown. @Mentions – type @ in any comment or reply to mention a user and trigger an instant notification. Collaboration Threaded replies – discuss feedback with your team in context under each pin. Inline editing – edit your own feedback descriptions and replies in place. Delete with confirmation – delete your own feedback or replies with a skippable confirmation dialog. Resolve / Unresolve – track completion state for each item. Resolved pins turn green. Draggable pins – reposition saved pins by dragging them to a new location. Sidebar & Navigation Pins sidebar – a collapsible sidebar lists all feedback on the current page with status filters (Unresolved / Resolved). Pages overview – an expandable pages panel shows feedback counts across all pages on the site. Priority dots – sidebar items display colour-coded priority indicators for quick scanning. Email Notifications Digest mode (recommended) – batches all activity into a single email at a configurable interval (15 / 30 / 60 minutes). Smart mode – digest by default, but sends instant emails for assignments and @mentions. Configurable – enable or disable notifications, choose delivery mode, and toggle instant alerts for assignments and mentions independently. Admin Feedback Plugin feedback form – send bug reports, questions, or feature requests to Native Infotech directly from the WordPress admin settings. Security & Permissions Role-based access – assign each WordPress administrator as Client, Dev, or No Access. Guest token access – optionally enable a private share link for non-WordPress clients. Guests can view page pins and create new feedback, but cannot edit, resolve, delete, or manage existing feedback. Client role – full access: create, edit own descriptions, move pins, assign, reply, resolve, delete, and upload attachments. Dev role – limited access: view, reply, and resolve/unresolve only. No Access – cannot see or use Annotix. Zero public routes – all REST endpoints require authentication with valid permissions. Rate limiting – built-in abuse protection on all REST endpoints. Performance Lazy-loaded screenshot library – the 195 KB html2canvas library is only fetched when the user actually takes a screenshot, not on every page load. Smaller screenshot files – JPEG output at configurable quality keeps feedback screenshots lightweight. Deferred screenshot saving – feedback submissions return faster by saving screenshots after the REST response is flushed when supported by the server. Non-blocking font loading – Google Fonts are loaded via the WordPress enqueue API instead of a render-blocking CSS import. Session caching – REST responses are cached in sessionStorage for instant rendering on repeat visits, with background refresh. Transient caching – mention-user queries are cached with a 5-minute WordPress transient to reduce database load. Conditional loading – all plugin assets only load for logged-in users who have been granted access. Who is it for? Annotix – Drag, Annotate, Feedback is designed for small teams (web agencies, freelancers, internal teams) where the designer, developer, and client all have WordPress administrator accounts and need a fast way to review and annotate the live site. Third-Party Services This plugin loads the Inter and Manrope font families from Google Fonts (fonts.googleapis.com) on frontend pages for logged-in users who have feedback access. No personal data is sent by the plugin itself, but the browser will make a request to Google’s servers to retrieve the font files. Service: Google Fonts Terms of Service: https://policies.google.com/terms Privacy Policy: https://policies.google.com/privacy This plugin bundles the html2canvas library (MIT license) for optional screenshot capture. The library is loaded locally from the plugin directory and makes no external requests. Project page: https://html2canvas.hertzen.com/ License: MIT This plugin includes a voluntary feedback form in the admin settings (Settings > Website Feedback > Feedback). If you choose to submit feedback, your name, email address, subject, and message are sent to Native Infotech via your site’s WordPress mail system. No data is collected automatically — submission only occurs when you click “Send Feedback”. Native Infotech: https://nativeinfotech.com/ Privacy Policy: https://nativeinfotech.com/privacy-policy/
Top keywords
- feedback27×3.11%
- screenshot9×1.04%
- access8×0.92%
- page8×0.92%
- pins7×0.81%
- wordpress7×0.81%
- com6×0.69%
- google6×0.69%
- https6×0.69%
- library5×0.58%
- sidebar5×0.58%
- annotate4×0.46%
Jumplinks Flow – Editorial Feedback, Review & Approval Workflow
Frustrated with client feedback chaos, multiple staging environments, endless meetings that could have been an email, hundreds of Jira tickets and lost Slack discussions? Jumplinks Flow was inspired by the GitHub pull request review experience with inline comments and approval or change requests workflow that developers love, brought natively into WordPress for content and site reviews. No SaaS subscription, no external tools, just a familiar, focused review experience your team will pick up from day one. If your current process depends on long comment threads, scattered docs and email, or third-party review tools, Flow gives you a cleaner path without complex setup or heavyweight workflow tools. ⚙️ How it works You assign a reviewer to the content. The reviewer opens the review page and sends feedback via inline comments anchored to the content. The reviewer requests changes or approves. If changes are requested, repeat 2–3 until approval is received. You publish with confidence once the content is approved. 🎯 Best for Agencies and developers who present in-progress work to clients for feedback and signoff Editorial teams that need a clear draft-to-publish workflow Website owners that want structure without heavy workflow configuration 💡 Why teams choose Flow GitHub-style workflow: Leave feedback exactly where it matters via inline comments so edits are clearer and faster. Review directly on rendered page: Reviewers don’t need access to the content editor; they review the rendered output. Works with any editor: Dedicated integration with Gutenberg, Classic Editor, Elementor, Bricks Builder, Beaver Builder, Divi, Avada, and Breakdance, but all editors are supported. Simple review and approval: Move content through practical statuses such as in review, changes requested, and approved. Familiar Gutenberg-style review page: Dedicated review UI that feels native to WordPress. Fast team onboarding: Minimal setup and intuitive UI for writers, editors, and reviewers. Status-change notifications: Keep everyone aligned with timely workflow updates. Lightweight by design: Built with native WordPress APIs and UI libraries. 🧩 Built for your content stack Editor support: Dedicated integration with Gutenberg, Classic Editor, Elementor, Bricks Builder, Beaver Builder, Divi, Avada, and Breakdance workflows. Content type flexibility: Use Flow for posts, pages, products, and custom post types. WooCommerce friendly: Works smoothly with WooCommerce-based editorial setups. ✨ What makes Flow different Most feedback tools are paid-only SaaS subscriptions that charge per reviewer and require clients to sign up for separate accounts. Flow runs entirely inside your WordPress site, and lets you invite reviewers with a single link — no signup, no monthly fee, no third-party service collecting your content. Editorial workflow plugins optimize for maximum configuration. Flow optimizes for feedback momentum. You get a clear approval process and contextual collaboration without overwhelming your team or clients with complexity. If you want an editorial workflow that is modern, focused, and easy to use from day one, Flow is built for you. 🚀 Pro features Flow Pro extends the free workflow with the following additions: 👥 Multiple reviewers Assign any number of reviewers per post and set a minimum approval count. Each vote (approved / changes requested / pending) is tracked independently. 🔗 Open to public Add external email addresses to a post review or site review. Each recipient gets a signed magic link that drops them straight into the review with their identity bound to that link. 🌐 Site-wide review Request a site review with one or many reviewers — logged-in users, external email invitees, or both. Reviewers land in a review mode overlaying your site, can navigate freely, and leave anchored comments on any page. 💬 Improved comments A TipTap-powered editor brings bold, italics, headings, lists, links, quotes, and code blocks to every review comment. Type @ to mention any reviewer, the author, or external invitees. 🔔 Slack integration Connect a Slack bot once and Flow DMs reviewers when they’re assigned, mentioned, approved, asked for changes, or invited to a site review. Member IDs auto-resolve by email; users can override per-event opt-ins from their profile. 📱 Device selector A device switcher in the review bar lets reviewers toggle between desktop, tablet, and mobile widths without leaving the page. 📊 Activity tracking An activity bar on the review page tracks every status change — pending review, in review, changes requested — along with the user who triggered each event. Development Where is the JavaScript and CSS source? Human-editable source for the compiled assets in build/ lives in the src/ directory. Files under build/ are generated by webpack; edit src/ instead of hand-editing build/. How do I rebuild the compiled assets? From the plugin directory, with a supported Node.js release: Run npm install or npm ci to install dependencies. Run npm run build to regenerate webpack output. Third-party JavaScript Packages such as @wordpress/scripts and @wordpress/icons are declared in package.json. After npm install, see each package under node_modules/ for license text, or refer to the upstream WordPress repositories. External services This plugin loads avatar images from Gravatar (operated by Automattic), which is a third-party service. What is sent: an MD5 hash of the user’s email address, generated by WordPress core via get_avatar_url(). No raw email address leaves the site. When: whenever the plugin renders a comment author avatar (review page comment cards, inline comment threads) or a reviewer/requester avatar (REST responses for the review sidebar and the Elementor, Bricks, Beaver Builder, Divi, Avada, and Breakdance drawers). Why: to display each commenter’s avatar next to their comment, matching the rest of the WordPress avatar experience. Service URL: https://gravatar.com/ Terms: https://automattic.com/terms/ Privacy: https://automattic.com/privacy/ This is the same Gravatar integration that ships with WordPress core; the plugin does not contact any other external services.