Microsites - PDFs are a 90s technology. This replaces them.
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Microsites turns PDFs, spreadsheets, and reports into interactive web pages powered by AI.
Upload a document and instantly get a shareable microsite with charts, structured sections, and responsive design.
Instead of sending files that get lost in email threads, send a link your clients can actually explore.
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Maker
📌
Hey Product Hunt 👋
I’m Noah, the founder of Microsites. Thanks for checking it out.
A little more context on what we’re building and why.
The original problem was simple: PDFs are still the default way we share reports, proposals, research, and documents. But once you send a PDF, the experience stops there. It’s static, hard to navigate, and you usually have no idea if the person even opened it.
Microsites takes those same documents and turns them into interactive web experiences instead of files.
Upload a PDF, Word doc, spreadsheet, or images and the system analyzes the structure of the document. It extracts sections, data, images, and key information, then generates a clean microsite that can include things like:
• structured sections and navigation • interactive charts generated from spreadsheet data • extracted images and diagrams placed into the layout • responsive design so it works on mobile or desktop • analytics so you can see when someone views it
Instead of sending an attachment, you send a link to a live page.
One of the biggest advantages is that the content can stay up to date. If the source document changes, the microsite can update instead of sending a new version every time.
Some of the ways early users are using it so far:
Consultants and agencies Turning long client reports or proposals into interactive deliverables that are easier for clients to navigate.
Sales teams Sharing product specs, pricing sheets, and technical documentation as a single clean page instead of multiple attachments.
Researchers and analysts Uploading reports with charts and data tables so the insights are easier to explore.
Legal and document-heavy workflows Breaking down complex documents into structured sections so people can actually understand them.
Internal documentation Turning PDFs and internal guides into quick shareable knowledge pages.
Another feature people like is image extraction. If your document has diagrams, figures, or charts embedded inside it, those are automatically pulled out and placed where they make sense in the page layout.
The goal isn’t to replace documents entirely. It’s to give people a better way to deliver them.
Instead of “Here’s a 40 page PDF, good luck.”
You can send something that feels more like “Here’s a simple page you can explore.”
We’re still early and actively improving things, so feedback from the Product Hunt community would be incredibly helpful.
If you tried it, I’d love to know:
• What type of documents would you use this for? • What features would make it more useful for your workflow?
I’ll be around all day answering questions. Appreciate everyone taking a look 🙌
Replies
Hey Product Hunt 👋
I’m Noah, the founder of Microsites. Thanks for checking it out.
A little more context on what we’re building and why.
The original problem was simple: PDFs are still the default way we share reports, proposals, research, and documents. But once you send a PDF, the experience stops there. It’s static, hard to navigate, and you usually have no idea if the person even opened it.
Microsites takes those same documents and turns them into interactive web experiences instead of files.
Upload a PDF, Word doc, spreadsheet, or images and the system analyzes the structure of the document. It extracts sections, data, images, and key information, then generates a clean microsite that can include things like:
• structured sections and navigation
• interactive charts generated from spreadsheet data
• extracted images and diagrams placed into the layout
• responsive design so it works on mobile or desktop
• analytics so you can see when someone views it
Instead of sending an attachment, you send a link to a live page.
One of the biggest advantages is that the content can stay up to date. If the source document changes, the microsite can update instead of sending a new version every time.
Some of the ways early users are using it so far:
Consultants and agencies
Turning long client reports or proposals into interactive deliverables that are easier for clients to navigate.
Sales teams
Sharing product specs, pricing sheets, and technical documentation as a single clean page instead of multiple attachments.
Researchers and analysts
Uploading reports with charts and data tables so the insights are easier to explore.
Legal and document-heavy workflows
Breaking down complex documents into structured sections so people can actually understand them.
Internal documentation
Turning PDFs and internal guides into quick shareable knowledge pages.
Another feature people like is image extraction. If your document has diagrams, figures, or charts embedded inside it, those are automatically pulled out and placed where they make sense in the page layout.
The goal isn’t to replace documents entirely. It’s to give people a better way to deliver them.
Instead of
“Here’s a 40 page PDF, good luck.”
You can send something that feels more like
“Here’s a simple page you can explore.”
We’re still early and actively improving things, so feedback from the Product Hunt community would be incredibly helpful.
If you tried it, I’d love to know:
• What type of documents would you use this for?
• What features would make it more useful for your workflow?
I’ll be around all day answering questions. Appreciate everyone taking a look 🙌