Leadsleek

Project estimates built in minutes. Shared as a link.

Most freelancers don’t lose deals because they’re bad. They lose because their estimates are vague, bloated, and impossible to trust. Leadsleek helps you write clear project estimates with scope, pricing, and timelines, then share them as a simple link.

Your estimate isn’t “too long”. It’s too fuzzy.

Clients don’t ghost because they hate you. They ghost because your estimate reads like a shrug.

Leadsleek (leadsleek.com) takes the messy back-and-forth - "What’s included? When do we start? Why does it cost that?" - and forces you to answer it upfront.

Not in a 12-page PDF. Not in a Google Doc that breaks on mobile.

A clean link.

What Leadsleek is actually selling

Forget “proposal software”. This is an anti-overexplaining tool.

You build an estimate fast, with the pieces clients care about:

  • Scope: what you will do (and what you won’t)
  • Pricing: what it costs and why
  • Timeline: when it happens, in plain language

Then you share it as a link, so the client can read it on their phone, forward it to a boss, or pull it up during a call without hunting through attachments.

Here’s the deal: the product doesn’t win you work by adding more words. It wins by cutting the right words.

Why this matters for freelancers

Freelancers live and die on clarity.

If your estimate leaves gaps, the client fills them with fear:

  • “This will run over”.
  • “They’ll nickel-and-dime me”.
  • “They don’t know what they’re doing”.

Leadsleek pushes you into a tighter shape: clear scope, clear numbers, clear dates. That reduces “Can you explain…” calls and speeds up the yes/no.

And when you ship estimates faster, you stop losing deals to the person who replied first.

The link format is the point

PDFs feel heavy. Docs feel sloppy.

A link feels modern, easy, and shareable. It also makes your estimate feel like a product, not a homework assignment.

But there’s a catch: the link only works if the content stays sharp.

Leadsleek’s focus on scope + price + timeline keeps you from hiding behind fancy formatting. You either define the work or you don’t.

Who should use it

  • Freelancers who sell projects (design, dev, marketing, ops)
  • Small studios that need faster approvals
  • Anyone tired of writing “estimate v7 FINAL final”

If you hate overexplaining, leadsleek.com is built for you.

Send the link. Get the answer. Move on.

Frequently Asked Questions

How to write a project estimate that clients actually approve?
Cut the fluff and make three things obvious: what’s included, what it costs, and when it ships. On leadsleek.com you can structure scope, pricing, and timeline into a clear estimate and share it as a link, so clients stop getting lost in PDFs and start making a decision.
How to stop clients from asking what’s included after you send an estimate?
Best way to send estimates without using PDF attachments?
How to price a freelance project when the scope feels unclear?
Why do clients ghost after receiving an estimate?
How to reduce estimate revisions and endless back-and-forth?