Share a PDF people actually watch
Record a quick video walkthrough over your PDF, share the whole thing as one link, and see which pages got read. No downloads, no second tab, no guessing if it landed.
Five free live documents. No card needed.
A sent PDF is not a read PDF
I spent years sending decks, proposals and one-pagers into inboxes and then just hoping. You attach the file, you write the careful email explaining it, and the moment it leaves your outbox you have no idea what happened. Did they open it. Did they get past page two. Did the bit that actually matters even register. Open-tracking tells you a file got looked at. It does not tell you the message landed. That gap, between opened and understood, is where deals quietly die.
Live in minutes
Upload your PDF
Drop in the proposal, deck or report you were about to email. It opens in the viewer, exactly as the reader will see it.
Record your walkthrough
Talk through it like you would in the room. Add clickable highlights that jump the video straight to the page you are talking about.
Share one link
Send a single link. No download, no attachment, no second tab. Then watch which pages they actually read.
Say it once, properly
Your reader hears the pitch in your voice, not a wall of text they skim. The walkthrough sits right on top of the PDF, so the explanation and the document are never in two places.
Point at the part that matters
Drop a highlight on the pricing table or the key clause and the video jumps straight there when they click. They get to the important bit without scrolling for it.
No downloads, no attachments
The whole thing is a single link. Nothing to download, nothing to lose in a thread, and you can update the document without resending. They always see the current version.
See what actually got read
Know how long they spent on each page, which sections they went back to, and the moment they opened it. So your follow-up is timed and aimed, not a blind nudge.
Better than the workarounds you are using now
Emailing the PDF
It is the easy default, and for a quick file it is fine. But once it is sent you get no version control, no analytics, and no way to guide the reader. They are on their own with it.
Loom plus a PDF
A Loom is a great walkthrough. The catch is the video and the document live in two separate tabs, so the reader is bouncing between them. LiveDocument keeps them together with highlights that sync.
A tracker like DocSend
DocSend is genuinely good at telling you a document got attention. It tracks opens and time on page well. What it does not do is let you guide the reader or talk them through it. It tracks, it does not communicate.
Frequently asked questions
Upload your PDF to LiveDocument, record a video walkthrough over it, then share the single link. The reader watches your walkthrough and reads the document in one place, with no download.
No. They open one link in their browser and everything plays there. No account, no download, no attachment to wrestle with.
Highlights are markers you place on the PDF that jump the video straight to that section when the reader clicks them. It is how you point someone at the pricing or the key clause without making them scroll for it.
Yes. You get page-level analytics: how long they spent on each page, which sections they revisited, and when they opened it. That is the difference between knowing a PDF was opened and knowing it was understood.
Yes. Because it is one link rather than an attachment, you can update the document and the reader always sees the current version. No resending.
You get five free live documents to begin with, no card needed. After that it is a flat monthly fee.
Share your next PDF the way it should be shared
Upload a document, talk through it, send one link. See it get read.