
Here's the short version: Wondergraph and SeedLegals solve completely different problems. Wondergraph shows you what happens after you share a document—who opened it, which pages they read, where they stopped. SeedLegals helps you create legal paperwork for funding rounds. One tracks attention. The other generates contracts.
If you're comparing the two, you're likely a founder who does both: pitch investors and close funding rounds. The good news is you don't have to choose between them. They work at different stages of your startup journey.
You send a pitch deck to an investor. Then you wait. A day passes. Then another. Did they even open it? Did they make it past the cover slide?
Wondergraph answers those questions. When you share a document through Wondergraph, you get a trackable link. That link tells you exactly when someone opens your file, how long they spend on each page, and the precise moment they stop reading. We call this "viewer intent signals"—real data about whether your outreach actually landed.
The platform works with pitch decks, sponsorship proposals, media kits, and sales materials. Basically, any PDF where knowing the recipient's engagement matters.
SeedLegals takes a different approach entirely. It's a legal document platform built for UK startups raising investment. Instead of tracking documents, it creates them—term sheets, shareholder agreements, EMI option schemes, board resolutions.
If you're closing a seed round and don't have a lawyer on retainer, SeedLegals provides templated documents that meet UK compliance requirements. It also manages your cap table, which is the record of who owns what percentage of your company as you issue shares and options.
FeatureWondergraphSeedLegalsPrimary purposeDocument engagement trackingLegal document creationTarget usersFounders, marketers, sales teamsFounders raising fundingDocument typesPitch decks, proposals, media kitsTerm sheets, contracts, agreementsCore valueKnow if recipients read your documentsGenerate compliant legal paperwork
The distinction comes down to timing. Wondergraph tracks what happens after you hit send. SeedLegals helps you create the documents in the first place.
Think of it this way: SeedLegals might help you draft a term sheet. Wondergraph tells you whether the investor you sent it to actually read the thing.
Wondergraph serves anyone who shares high-stakes documents and wants to know what happened next. That includes founders pitching investors, marketers distributing media kits, and sales teams sending proposals.
SeedLegals serves founders actively closing funding rounds. If you're negotiating terms with angels or VCs and need legal paperwork without hiring a solicitor for every document, that's the use case.
Wondergraph organizes analytics around three categories: activity, funnel, and drop-off. Each one tells you something different about how recipients interact with your documents.
Activity analytics show you when someone opens your link. Not just that they opened it—exactly when. You also see if they come back for a second look, which often signals genuine interest.
Real-time notifications mean you know the moment a recipient views your document. That timing matters when you're deciding when to follow up.
Funnel analytics track how viewers move through your document, page by page. You see which slides hold attention and which get skipped entirely.
This goes beyond basic email tracking, which only tells you if a message was opened. With funnel analytics, you know whether someone actually read your pricing page or bounced after the intro.
Drop-off analytics pinpoint the exact page where viewers lose interest. If everyone stops reading at slide seven, you've found the problem. Now you know what to fix before the next send.
Over time, this data helps you build better documents. You're not guessing what works—you're seeing it.
Beyond analytics, Wondergraph gives you control over who can access your documents and under what conditions:
That last feature is particularly useful. You can fix a typo or update your financials without sending a new link to everyone.
SeedLegals focuses on the legal side of startup operations, particularly around fundraising and equity management.
The platform generates the legal documents required to close a funding round. For UK startups, this includes SEIS and EIS compliance—tax relief schemes that matter to angel investors looking for qualifying investments.
SeedLegals provides templated contracts, employment agreements, and shareholder documents. The templates are designed for startups without in-house legal teams who still want professional-grade paperwork.
A cap table records who owns what percentage of your company. As you issue shares to investors and options to employees, SeedLegals tracks ownership percentages and keeps your records organized.
Wondergraph offers a free tier. You can upload documents, share trackable links, and see engagement data without entering payment details. It's a good way to test whether document tracking fits your workflow.
SeedLegals pricing varies by funding round complexity and the legal services you select. Both platforms serve startups, but at different price points and for different purposes. Check each platform directly for current pricing.
Tip: If you're just starting to share pitch decks with investors, Wondergraph's free tier lets you test document tracking before committing to anything.
You send a deck and hear nothing. The silence is frustrating because you don't know if they're busy, uninterested, or simply haven't opened it yet. Wondergraph removes that uncertainty. You see exactly what happened—whether they opened it, how far they got, and when.
Timing matters in fundraising. When an investor opens your deck at 9 PM on a Tuesday, that's useful information. You can follow up the next morning while your pitch is fresh in their mind.
You also see which pages held attention. If investors consistently spend time on your traction slide but skip your market size analysis, that tells you something about what resonates.
Following up blindly feels awkward. Following up with context feels natural. When you know someone spent three minutes on your deck yesterday, you can reference that in your email. "I noticed you had a chance to look at the deck—happy to answer any questions."
SeedLegals generates the paperwork required to close investment. If you're raising in the UK and want compliant term sheets and shareholder agreements without hiring a law firm, this is the tool for that job.
Access pre-built legal templates without paying lawyer rates for every document. For early-stage startups moving quickly through a funding round, this saves both time and money.
As you issue shares and options, SeedLegals keeps your equity records organized. You always know who owns what percentage of your company.
Absolutely. Many startups use both because the tools complement each other rather than compete.
Here's a common workflow: You create a term sheet in SeedLegals, then upload it to Wondergraph and share a trackable link with potential investors. Now you know not just that you sent the document, but whether each investor actually read it.
This combination gives you both the legal documents you need and the engagement data to understand what's happening with them.
If your goal is knowing whether investors read your pitch deck, Wondergraph is purpose-built for exactly that. SeedLegals doesn't offer document engagement analytics—it's focused on legal document creation.
Wondergraph shows opens, page views, time spent, and drop-off points. That's the information you want after hitting send on a pitch deck. You'll know who engaged, what they read, and where they stopped.
For founders actively fundraising, this visibility changes how you approach follow-ups. Instead of sending generic "just checking in" emails, you can reach out with context and timing that makes sense.
Getting started takes about two minutes. Upload your pitch deck or proposal, get a trackable link, and share it wherever you already communicate—email, LinkedIn, messaging apps, or client portals.
Start free and see who opens, what they read, and where they stop. No credit card required.
Wondergraph and SeedLegals don't have a direct integration. However, you can upload any document—including those created in SeedLegals—to Wondergraph for tracking. The workflow is simple: export your document, upload it to Wondergraph, and share the trackable link.
No. SeedLegals focuses on legal document creation and equity management. It doesn't offer document engagement analytics or viewer tracking. For that functionality, you'd use a tool like Wondergraph.
Yes. Wondergraph offers document engagement analytics similar to DocSend, including opens, page views, time spent, and drop-off tracking. The platform is built with a focus on small business and startup teams who want straightforward document tracking without complexity.
Yes. You can upload any PDF to Wondergraph and track viewer engagement. That includes legal documents, contracts, term sheets, and agreements. If you want to know whether someone read a document you sent, Wondergraph can track it.
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