You spent two hours refining a Midjourney prompt, ran 40 variations and finally landed on the perfect image set. Now you need to get those files to the client. Pasting them into an email thread is not going to work. The resolution drops, the filenames get mangled and the client has no way to browse everything in one place. Here is how to share AI-generated content with clients the right way.
The Problem with Sharing AI Outputs
AI tools generate a lot of files. A single Midjourney session can produce dozens of high-resolution PNGs. A batch of DALL-E outputs might include 20 to 50 images at 1024x1024 or higher. Stable Diffusion users working locally often export at even larger resolutions with metadata baked in. Beyond images, there are generated PDF reports, data model outputs, audio clips and text documents that all need to reach someone else's screen.
The usual sharing methods fall apart quickly. Email attachments have size limits that cut off after a handful of images. Cloud drive folders require the client to have an account. Messaging apps compress images automatically, which defeats the purpose of generating high-quality visuals in the first place.
What you need is a way to upload the full-resolution files, share a single link and let the client preview and download everything without installing anything.
Step 1: Organize Your AI Outputs Before Uploading
Before you share anything, take five minutes to organize. Rename files so the client can tell what they are looking at. A filename like "midjourney_v6_hero_banner_option_A.png" is far more useful than "grid_0_2847.png." Group related outputs into logical sets. If you generated three hero image options and five social media variations, separate them clearly.
Step 2: Upload the Full-Resolution Files
Drag your organized files into EasySend. There is no account required and no file size limit that will get in your way for standard image sets. The upload handles PNGs, JPEGs, TIFFs and any other format your AI tool exports.
For photo and image sharing, EasySend generates previews automatically. Your client will see thumbnails of every image before they download anything. This is especially useful for AI-generated image sets where the client needs to pick their favorites from a batch.
If you are sharing generated PDF reports from tools like Jasper or ChatGPT-based document builders, the PDF sharing feature lets recipients read the document in-browser without downloading it first.
Step 3: Send a Single Link
After the upload finishes, you get one link. Copy it and send it however you normally communicate with the client. Text message, Slack, email, project management tool - it does not matter. The link works everywhere and the recipient does not need an account or an app.
The client clicks the link, sees a clean preview of every file and can download individual items or grab the entire set as a ZIP. No login walls, no "request access" buttons and no waiting for permissions.
Step 4: Add Context with Password Protection or Notes
If the AI-generated content is for an unreleased campaign or a confidential project, add a password before sharing. You can also set the link to expire after a certain period so the files do not float around forever. This is particularly important for freelancers sharing spec work or pitch materials that should not be accessible indefinitely.
Common AI Output Workflows
Midjourney Image Delivery
Midjourney outputs are typically high-resolution PNGs. A standard workflow looks like this: generate variations in Discord, upscale your favorites, save the full-resolution files to a local folder, rename them with descriptive names and upload the batch to EasySend. Send the link to the client with a note about which options you recommend. The client browses the previews, picks their favorites and downloads just those files.
DALL-E Batch Outputs
DALL-E users often generate batches through the API, which means dozens of images landing in a folder at once. Upload the entire folder and let the client sort through the visual previews rather than trying to describe each image in an email.
Stable Diffusion Local Renders
If you run Stable Diffusion locally, your outputs might be significantly larger than cloud-generated images. Resolutions of 2048x2048 or higher are common and some workflows produce TIFF files with embedded metadata. These files are too large for most messaging platforms. Upload them at full resolution and the client gets exactly what you rendered.
Generated Reports and Documents
AI-generated reports, market analyses and content drafts are usually PDFs or Word documents. Upload them alongside any supporting data files and share one link that contains everything the client needs to review.
Why This Matters for Designers and Creative Freelancers
If you are a designer incorporating AI-generated assets into client work, the delivery experience is part of the service. Sending a messy email thread with compressed images tells the client you do not care about presentation. Sending a clean, organized preview link with full-resolution downloads tells them you are professional and detail-oriented.
The Bottom Line
AI tools generate high-quality outputs. The sharing workflow should match that quality. Organize your files, upload them at full resolution, send one link and let the client browse everything in a clean preview interface. No accounts, no compression and no hassle. That is how professionals deliver AI-generated content.