Feedback reopens approved work
Without approval states, old decisions can become new revision cycles.
Creative projects need room to evolve. But extra assets, new directions, additional formats, and late feedback should become visible choices, not silent unpaid work.
Creative scope risk
subjective feedback
Clear approval states help separate refinement from new direction.
Creative change
Live projectRevision
Included
New direction
Extra scope
Added format
2 hours
Why it matters
Preferences are valid. They still need boundaries when they change the work, timeline, or deliverables.
Without approval states, old decisions can become new revision cycles.
New exports, sizes, versions, and use cases add production time.
Creative relationships are personal, so boundary messages need tact.
The EasyScope way
EasyScope lets you stay open to ideas while making their cost visible.
Define outputs, review stages, revision rounds, and approval states.
Price extra formats, concepts, assets, rounds, and rush changes.
Use a client approval link, change order, or diplomatic message before producing extra work.
Proof points
EasyScope protects the project boundary without flattening the creative relationship.
Review portal
Collect approval or revision feedback in one place.
Change orders
Formalize additional creative work.
AI Diplomat
Explain scope changes with tact.
Invoices
Bill accepted extras with project context.
No awkward surprises
No. It makes new decisions visible so flexibility remains sustainable.
Yes. The point is to choose deliberately rather than absorb by default.
Yes. Clients can review deliverables and request revisions through a secure link.
Keep ideas flowing without letting the project leak margin.
Protect creative scope