Functionality | 7 <p>Dropbox Sign is an okay eSignature solution but has some limitations. It lacks web forms, custom fields, and formula fields, limiting customization. Files must be requested separately, and it doesn’t auto-suggest or place fields. There's no signer delegation or e-witnessing, restricting some workflows. Advanced security like knowledge-based authentication is missing, but password protection is available. The reports dashboard tracks usage and signature statuses, but overall, advanced features are limited.</p> | 4 <p>DocHub is a basic eSignature tool with limited features. It lacks web forms, payment collection, formula, custom, and conditional fields. It doesn’t auto-suggest or place fields, support signer delegation, or offer e-witnessing. There's no reporting dashboard, but the "Sent" page provides an overview of document statuses.</p> |
Ease of Use | 6 <p>The platform is easy to use with a clean, modern design, but it lacks field auto-placement for faster document creation. The builder doesn’t support custom fields, and there’s no file upload field, meaning documents must be requested separately—a major drawback. However, bulk sending, auto-reminders, and auto-fill from integrations help streamline workflows. Users can also edit and resend documents without voiding them, making corrections quick and simple.</p> | 8 <p>For basic eSignature sharing and collection, DocHub offers a basic feature set, with its simplicity contributing to ease of use. It’s okay for core eSignature needs but lacks reporting, conditional / controlled input, and e-witness or signer delegation, which may limit certain agreements. Despite these gaps, it remains quite user-friendly.</p> |
Look and feel | 6 <p>Although Dropbox Sign has a solid set of features, the interface is simple, modern, and has a nice theme. Navigation is straightforward, but it’s more of a file management platform than a typical layout for managing eSignature documents and tracking them. The drag-and-drop builder is easy to use but not as advanced as some competitors. </p> | 5 <p>DocHub has a clean but overly simple interface that could show more details on the dashboard and documents pages for quicker access to key information. The drag-and-drop builder feels slightly outdated, requiring users to open field options manually instead of using a persistent sidebar, making it less efficient.</p> |
Customisability | 5 <p>Dropbox Sign handles basic e-signatures but lacks key advanced customizability like e-witnessing and signer delegation, limiting signing flows. It also doesn’t support radio buttons, custom fields, or formula fields, reducing document customization. User role and permission control is minimal—you can only manage folder-level view/edit access for team members.</p> | 4 <p>DocHub handles basic e-signatures but lacks key advanced customizability like e-witnessing and signer delegation, limiting signing flows. It also doesn’t support custom fields, formula fields, or conditional fields, reducing document customization. User permissions can't be customized either.</p> |
Ease of Setup | 5 <p>Dropbox Sign offers a free trial, but the highest tier plan requires speaking with sales. The onboarding process is simple, allowing users to create eSignature documents within 5–10 minutes. It integrates directly with many platforms, though Pipedrive and Slack require Zapier. Custom branding is easy to configure. Despite its many features, the help docs are well-organized and detailed. Setting up reusable templates, security settings, and user roles takes a few hours, while enterprise-level setup may take around a week.</p> | 9 <p>DocHub offers a free trial with self-serve purchasing for all tiers except enterprise. Onboarding is quick, allowing users to create eSignature documents in 5–10 minutes. Custom branding and integrations are easy to set up (since they are very limited), while configuring reusable templates might take an hour or two.</p> |
Customer Support | 5 <p>Dropbox Sign offers customer support based on your plan. All users can access the Help Center with a good range of articles and guides. Email support is available via request submission, but live chat and phone support are limited to higher-paid tiers. Response times for email support are typically within one business day, but this can be faster for users with the paid support add-on.</p> | 5 <p>DocHub support allows users to submit requests via email (with replies typically within a few days) and offers a toll-free US support number. They have a well-organized Help Center, but users should search within it directly rather than using a search engine, as many SEO-driven pages inaccurately list features they don't offer.</p> |
Integratability | 8 <p>Dropbox Sign natively integrates with platforms like Salesforce, HubSpot, and Google Drive. Pipedrive, Stripe, and PayPal require Zapier, which also connects to thousands of other apps. An API is available for custom integrations and automation.</p> | 1 <p>Integrations are severely limited, with only Google Drive and Dropbox supported. It doesn’t integrate with platforms like Salesforce or Slack, and there’s no Zapier or API access, making custom integrations nearly impossible.</p> |
Ease of Migration | 7 <p>Dropbox Sign offers multiple ways to export completed document data. Finished documents can be exported as PDFs with the audit trail. You can also share via Dropbox and export to various platforms using quick-access buttons. Native CRM integrations enable seamless data syncing, with API options for further customization.</p> | 2 <p>DocHub offers minimal data export options, partly due to no Zapier or API access. Finished documents and audit trails can be exported as PDFs, and another major drawback is the lack of downloadable reports for tracking insights across multiple documents.</p> |