Most teams don't go looking for proofing software until the absence of it has already cost them something.
A round of feedback that lived in three Slack threads and an email chain. A campaign that shipped with last quarter's disclaimer because the agency was working from yesterday's PDF. Legal signed off on the wrong cut of a video, and nobody noticed until it was live.
The need for a tool is obvious by the time it arises. The hard part starts at the first vendor demo, when every platform on the shortlist looks more or less the same on the happy path: one designer, one PDF, one approver, done. Most environments do not look like that, and the features that separate the platforms are not the ones reviewers click on in the demo.
There are a dozen credible online proofing software platforms in the category.
They split roughly three ways.
Telling a weak option from a strong one on a feature list is straightforward. The strong tier handles every asset class in one interface, renders InDesign and PDF natively rather than converting on the fly, supports frame-accurate video annotation, runs multi-stage routing with conditional logic, and ships a real audit trail with e-signatures and exportable proof reports. The weak tier handles PDFs and images well and outsources the rest to email.
The hard part of the evaluation is not the weak-versus-strong split. It is choosing between three vendors in the strong tier that look almost identical in a sales demo, because the features that decide the question are the ones a creative workflow leans on once the tool is in production. Routing logic that survives a reviewer leaving the company. An audit trail defensible enough to hand to legal without rebuilding it from screenshots. A video review path that does not bounce the editor back into email. None of that surfaces in a demo. It surfaces in the workflow that grows around the tool over the first six months.
This guide walks the nine criteria that hold up in real evaluations, in the order an experienced evaluator would weigh them. Ziflow's founders built ProofHQ, the platform that effectively created online proofing in the first place, and started Ziflow afterward to build what the original could not. The criteria below are drawn from years of watching evaluations play out from inside the category.
Proofing software, sometimes called online proofing or creative review software, is the platform a creative team uses to share assets with stakeholders, collect feedback, manage versions, and capture formal approvals. It replaces the cycle of email attachments, marked-up PDFs, Slack screenshots, and verbal sign-offs that creative review used to depend on.
The category covers a wide asset range: design files, PDFs, images, video, audio, HTML5 banners, and live or staged web pages. Reviewers leave time-coded comments on a video, pixel-level annotations on a layout, or page-element comments on a staged site. The system tracks who said what, which version they said it on, who approved which round, and when.
For regulated industries (pharma, financial services, government, large healthcare), proofing software also serves as the system of record for compliance reviews. The audit trail it generates is what teams point to when legal, brand, or an outside auditor asks how a piece of creative was reviewed before it shipped.
The demo is built around an unrealistically simple flow: one designer, a single file, one round of feedback, and a proactive approver.
Most environments do not look like that.
Designers work in one tool, copywriters in another, the agency in a third, and there is usually a legal reviewer who refuses to log into a fourth. The proofing tool sits in the middle of all of it.
A serious evaluation answers a different question than the demo does. The demo answers can this tool review a proof? Every tool on the shortlist can. The evaluation has to answer does this tool have what the team needs to run a reliable creative workflow at the volume and asset mix it is actually going to have? That is the question the nine criteria below are written to answer.
The criteria below are ordered by weight: the ones that decide the outcome appear first.
A tool that handles PDFs and images cleanly but punts on video, audio, HTML5, or live websites pushes some of the review work back into email. That is the problem the tool is supposed to solve. Campaign work crosses formats, and the review system has to follow it.
What to look for
What to avoid
Internal teams will learn whatever tool gets picked. External reviewers (agency partners, freelancers, clients, outside legal counsel) will not. A reviewer experience that requires a login, an account setup, or a training walkthrough returns a fraction of the feedback the project actually needs.
What to look for
What to avoid
Manual routing works at two proofs a week. At fifty proofs a week across three review stages and four reviewer groups, manual routing becomes the bottleneck. The workflow engine is what carries the operation as volume scales.
What to look for
What to avoid
Version confusion is the most common reason the wrong creative ends up live. Every proofing tool claims version control. What separates them is how the system enforces it: whether old versions get locked from new comments, whether reviewers always land on the current version, and whether side-by-side comparison surfaces pixel-level differences without manual setup.
What to look for
What to avoid
In a regulated industry, the audit trail is the deliverable. Legal, brand, and regulatory reviewers need a defensible record of who approved what, when, and against which version. The same record matters in any industry the moment something goes wrong: a competitor complains, a customer sues, a regulator asks for evidence. Proof tracking and management is where that record either gets built or breaks.
What to look for
What to avoid
Security is where the proofing evaluation meets procurement and IT. The questionnaire is coming. Either the answers are sitting in a trust center the day procurement asks, or the procurement cycle adds a month.
What to look for
What to avoid
The proofing tool only gets adopted if it sits inside the workflow the team already runs. That means it has to connect cleanly to the design tools the creative team lives in (Adobe Creative Cloud, Figma), the project management system creative ops uses to run the schedule (ClickUp, monday.com, Jira), the DAM where final assets land, and the marketing automation platform on the publishing side.
What to look for
What to avoid
Most proofing tools demo well and onboard badly. Onboarding is what determines whether the tool becomes the system the team uses or the second tab nobody opens.
What to look for
What to avoid
The license on the order form is rarely the full picture. Reviewer counts, storage tiers, integration work, training time, and the carrying cost of a tool the team does not adopt all hit the budget eventually. Vendor pricing pages tell part of the story. The rest lives in the contract.
What to look for
What to avoid
The table below ranks finalists across each criterion. Scoring runs from 1 (does not meet the bar) to 5 (clearly best in class). Criteria should be weighted by the impact the team will feel at scale. The notes column is where the demo evidence lives, capturing the specific moment a criterion passed or failed.
The right answer to "which proofing tool" depends on which team is asking the question. The same framework produces different finalists for the three archetypes below.
A small in-house creative team or a boutique agency. Volume is manageable. The decision usually turns on reviewer experience and a clean interface the team will adopt without a formal training rollout. Workflow automation matters less in year one than it will in year three.
Optimize for: reviewer experience, asset coverage, total cost.
An agency or in-house team running campaigns across video, digital, print, and web. Volume is high enough that manual coordination is the bottleneck. Workflow templates and integrations are what carry the operation.
Optimize for: workflow automation, integrations, asset coverage, version control.
Pharma, financial services, government, large healthcare. Compliance review is part of every proof. The security and audit trail evaluation is going to be more rigorous than the proofing evaluation itself, and procurement will not move without the trust center artifacts in hand.
Optimize for: security posture, audit trail and compliance, workflow automation, support and onboarding.
Ziflow was built by the founders of ProofHQ, the platform that effectively created online proofing in the first place. ProofHQ sold to Workfront in 2015. Ziflow followed soon after, designed from scratch with the architectural lessons the original could not retrofit. The capabilities below map directly to the nine criteria above. The full product overview lives on the Ziflow site.
Every tool on the shortlist looks capable in a demo. The one that holds up is the one whose workflow engine, reviewer experience, audit trail, and security posture were already mature at signing, not the one that promised them on a roadmap. The nine criteria above are how to tell them apart before the procurement clock starts.
That is the conversation the Ziflow team has most often. A working session walks the nine criteria against the actual asset mix, the actual reviewer roster, and the security questionnaire IT will hand over in week two.