A voice feedback tool for a web page, built for sales

Mark Jacobs · Updated Jul 6, 2026

The short answer

Vista lets a buyer leave a voice note directly on the web page you sent them. Unlike generic voice-feedback widgets, reactions are transcribed and polished, tagged as a question, objection, or buying signal, and filed to the right deal — anchored to the resource the buyer reacted to. It's voice feedback built for the sales loop, not a bare comment box. Free while in beta.

A voice feedback tool lets someone leave a spoken reaction on the page in front of them, instead of typing a comment or writing back days later. Most are generic: a mic button that drops a raw clip in a bucket. Vista is different. It is a voice feedback tool built for selling — your buyer talks on your collateral, and the reaction comes back transcribed, tagged, and filed to the deal. Here is how it works and why it beats a plain comment box.

Voice feedback on the page itself

Your buyer opens the link and can react without leaving the page. They hold ⌘ (or tap) and talk, right on the collateral they are looking at. Live transcription shows their words as they speak, so they can see it working.

Picture the buyer on your pricing page. One line catches them. Instead of making a mental note they will forget by the next meeting, they hold the key and say what they think: this tier looks right, but how are overages billed. You get that sentence, on that page, minutes later.

Nothing gets installed. Buyer needs nothing — no account, no login, no app. It works on a laptop or a phone, and if they would rather not talk, they can type instead. The reaction is anchored to the exact resource on screen, so you always know what prompted it.

Built for sales, not a generic widget

A generic voice-feedback widget hands you a mic and a place to store clips. That is where it stops. You end up with a pile of recordings and no idea which deal they belong to, what the person was reacting to, or what to do next.

Vista knows the context a bare widget cannot. It knows the deal, the resource on screen, and which buyer is talking. Say your deck goes to three people. With a generic tool you get three clips in a folder and a guessing game about who said what. With Vista, each reaction arrives labeled by person and pinned to the thing that set it off.

This matters most across a buying committee. When your champion forwards the room to their CFO, the CFO's reaction comes back as its own attributed message. You can tell whose voice is whose. If you want the full picture of what Vista is underneath, it is a room your buyer can talk back to.

Transcribed and polished into a clean message

A raw voice clip is work. You have to stop, play it, and listen to someone think out loud for a minute to find the one sentence that matters. Vista does that part for you.

The rambly take comes back transcribed and polished into a clean, readable message. You skim it in seconds and know exactly what the buyer said. No scrubbing through audio, no straining to parse a garbled recording. You read the point, not the noise around it.

Tagged by what it actually is

Every reaction is classified by what it actually is, so the inbox sorts itself:

  • Question — something they need answered before they can move.
  • Objection — the thing giving them pause.
  • Buying signal — the moment they lean in.
  • Stakeholder mention — a name you now know to bring in.
  • Action item — the follow-up they are expecting from you.

These are tags, not scores. Vista does not invent a sentiment number or a satisfaction rating. It reads what the buyer said and files it under what it is, so you can move on it instead of interpreting a dashboard.

Filed to the deal, audio kept

Reactions do not land in a generic feed. They land in an inbox organized by deal, each one anchored to the exact resource the buyer reacted to. Open the deal and the questions, objections, and buying signals are all in one place.

You are not reconstructing a conversation from memory three days later. The reaction is sitting in the deal, in the buyer's own words, next to the thing that prompted it. When you sit down to follow up, the hard part is already done.

The audio is always kept. Most of the time the clean message is all you need, but the original recording is there if you want to hear the tone. Nothing gets thrown away.

Where do a buyer's voice reactions end up?

In an inbox organized by deal, with each reaction anchored to the resource the buyer reacted to and tagged by what it is. The original audio is kept too, so you can go back to the tone if you want it.

Where it fits your workflow

This is the moment right after you send. Run the demo, share the pricing page, send the proposal — then put it all in a room and send one link. Instead of silence, the feedback comes back sorted by deal and tagged by what it is. You stop guessing what landed and start reading what the buyer said.

Want to see it from the buyer's side? Read what buyers see in a Vista room. If your problem is getting people to react at all, start with getting buyers to engage with your collateral. Or read how a voicemail on your collateral changes the follow-up.

Free while in beta. No credit card at signup. Build a room, send the link, and hear what your buyer actually thinks — in their own voice, on the page you sent.

Questions sellers actually ask

What is a voice feedback tool for a web page?
It lets someone leave a spoken reaction on the page in front of them instead of typing a comment or writing back later. Vista's is built for sales: the reaction is transcribed, tagged, and filed to the deal.
How is Vista different from a generic voice-comment widget?
A generic widget just stores clips. Vista transcribes and polishes each reaction, tags it by what it is, and files it to the deal — anchored to the exact resource the buyer reacted to.
Do I get a raw recording or text?
You get a polished, tagged message you can skim in seconds, not a raw clip to slog through. The original audio is kept too, so you can hear the tone if you want it.
Can buyers leave voice feedback on mobile?
Yes. On a phone they tap the mic and talk. Buyer needs nothing — no account, no login, no app — and it works the same on a laptop.

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Free while in beta · Buyer needs nothing