I've been building websites and web applications for clients for a long time. One thing that never changes is the chaos of sharing deliverables. Links scattered across email threads. Documents in three different cloud drives. A Loom video buried in a Slack message from six weeks ago.
So I built something to fix it.
Samla is a tool I've been working on that lets you create shareable hubs — a single link where everything your client needs lives in one place. Documents, links, media, updates. Organised, always accessible, and no login required for the people you share it with.
I wanted to share what it is and why I built it.
The problem
If you run an agency, freelance, or work in any team that serves clients, you know the drill. A project kicks off and suddenly you're managing deliverables across email, Slack, Google Drive, Dropbox, Notion, Figma, and whatever else your team uses.
Your client asks "where's that link?" and you spend ten minutes searching. They need the latest version of a document and you're not sure which thread it was in. A new stakeholder joins the project and you have to forward fifteen emails to bring them up to speed.
The tools themselves are fine. The problem is there's no single place that ties everything together for the people you're sharing it with.
What Samla does
Samla lets you create hubs. A hub is a clean, shareable page where you can collect everything related to a project, client, or team. You add content blocks — links, documents, images, videos, rich text — and arrange them however makes sense. Then you share a single link.
That's it. One link. Everything organised.
You can organise hubs by client, so all their projects live under one roof. You can drag and drop content to reorder it. The pages look good on any device and support dark mode. It works with anything that has a URL — Figma files, Loom recordings, Google Docs, Trello boards, Notion pages, invoices, contracts, whatever your workflow involves.
Who it's for
I originally built Samla to solve my own problem — sharing project deliverables with clients. But it's useful for anyone who needs to gather links and resources into one shareable place:
Agencies: Create a hub per client or per project. Onboard new stakeholders with a single link instead of a chain of forwarded emails.
Freelancers: Give your clients a professional, organised space for everything you deliver. It's a better experience than attachments and ad-hoc file sharing.
Internal teams: Set up hubs for onboarding, team resources, project documentation, or anything that needs a central home.
Anyone sharing resources: If you've ever wished you could send someone one link instead of seven, Samla is for you.
Why I built it myself
I looked at the existing tools — portals, wikis, shared drives, Notion workspaces — and none of them hit the right balance. They were either too complex for the person receiving the content, or too simple to be genuinely useful.
Samla is built around one idea: the person you share it with should never have to think. No logins. No learning a new tool. Just a clean page with everything they need.
Building products is also how I stay sharp. Working on Samla means I'm dealing with the same challenges my clients face — user experience, performance, onboarding, iteration. It makes me better at the work I do for others.
If you're interested in trying it out, you can sign up for free at usesamla.com.
About Fraser Clark
I've been a professional developer for over 15 years, consulting and developing websites & software for small businesses, multi-nationals & governments.
I'm an expert in WordPress, Drupal, Laravel & a whole host of other platforms.