Web Requesting Flows – Screen Recordings from Top Apps

Watch web Requesting flows from leading SaaS products, e-commerce sites, and consumer apps. Each flow is a full screen recording with annotations, showing how top web products design the Requesting experience.

Web Requesting Flow — Where Conversion Happens

Requesting on the web is often where key metrics are won or lost — conversion rates, activation, retention. This page collects real Requesting flow recordings from across the Page Flows web library, giving you an evidence base to benchmark against and borrow from.

End-to-End Requesting Flow Recordings

Each recording captures the full Requesting sequence end to end: the entry point, every step, error and empty states, and the completion experience. These details are where the real design decisions live, and studying them in video form is the closest you can get to using the product yourself.

For Growth Teams and Conversion-Focused Designers

For growth teams, PMs, and conversion-focused designers, this library replaces the "screenshot the competitor" approach with systematic research. Rather than piecing together a Requesting flow from memory or secondhand accounts, you watch it happen — in full, in context, on real products users trust.

Frequently Asked Questions

What web Requesting flow examples are included?

The library features Requesting flows from leading web apps across SaaS, e-commerce, fintech, and consumer categories. New recordings are added regularly.

Are these full recordings or just key screens?

Full recordings. Each captures the complete Requesting sequence — from entry point through every step to completion — so you see the full design decision in context.

Can I filter Requesting flows by industry or category?

Yes. Use brand and category filters to narrow Requesting flows to products in your vertical, making your research more relevant.

How does web Requesting differ from iOS or Android versions?

Web Requesting flows typically run on larger screens with richer interactions (hover states, multi-column layouts, keyboard shortcuts) that don't translate to mobile. If a brand has a mobile app in our library, you can compare directly.