Downloads & branding on a review link
Decide who can download which quality, hand over a whole batch as one zip, and put your logo (or your client’s) on the page.
Updated
A review link's last job is the handoff: getting the approved files into your client's hands without a file-transfer detour, and doing it on a page that looks like your studio, not ours. Both live in the same link settings. You decide whether downloads are on at all, which quality your reviewer can pull, and whose logo sits on top.
Turn on downloads and the quality picker
Downloads are off by default. Flip Allow downloads on and a download control appears for your reviewer. Instead of one take-it-or-leave-it file, they get a menu: the original master, plus ready-to-download versions at 1080p, 720p, and 480p, each with an estimated file size next to it.
Turn Allow downloads on and reviewers get a quality picker to choose from.
That estimate matters. A client on a hotel connection can grab the 720p for a quick check while your finishing house pulls the original. You expose the ceiling, and they choose what they actually need.
Hand over a batch with Download All
When a link carries more than one asset and downloads are on, your reviewer also gets a Download All button in the header. One click zips every original into a single file. It turns "can you send me all six cutdowns" into an action they take themselves, at 2am if they want, without another message to you.
Brand the page
A review link is a client touchpoint, so it should wear your identity or theirs. In the link's branding settings you can set:
- A logo on the page.
- Primary and accent colors to match the brand.
- A watermark: text laid across the video for sensitive or pre-release cuts.
For a look you'll reuse, save it once as a brand kit and apply it to every link instead of re-setting colors each time. The same kit powers your reels, so a client sees one consistent studio across everything you send.
Put it together
A finished review link often reads like this: comments off now that notes are done, downloads on, a client-facing logo up top, and a light watermark on a cut that isn't public yet. Every one of those is a toggle on the link, so the same URL can start as a working review page and end as a clean delivery page.
Next steps
- Keep a delivery link private: Password-protect & expire a review link.
- Reuse the same look on your showreel: Brand & customize your reel.
Ready to try it?
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