Email- and phone-based registration
A sign-up form collects first name, last name, email, and phone number, giving the product a clear account-registration entry point.
GaanaAI is a web app with a brief-to-vision positioning and an account-based sign-up flow. The public pages show email OTP verification, sign-in access, and basic registration fields, but not a full feature or pricing breakdown.
GaanaAI is a web app with a brief-to-vision positioning and a simple account-based entry flow. The public pages show sign-up and sign-in screens rather than a detailed feature tour, so the clearest documented behavior is account creation followed by access to the app.
The sign-up form asks for first name, last name, email, and phone number, and the site says the email is used to send an OTP code. That suggests GaanaAI uses code-based verification before users can continue into the product, but the collected pages do not describe the full creation or generation workflow beyond the tagline.
A sign-up form collects first name, last name, email, and phone number, giving the product a clear account-registration entry point.
The sign-up page notes that the email address is used to send an OTP code, indicating code-based account verification.
The interface offers both sign-up and sign-in paths, so returning users can access the app without creating a new account.
The product promise, "Turn your briefs into vision," indicates that the app is built around converting written inputs into visual output or a vision-oriented result.
The pages include Terms of Service and Privacy Policy consent language, which is part of the account creation flow.
A new visitor can create an account using basic contact details and receive an OTP code by email to continue into the app.
Someone who already has access can use the sign-in page to return to the app without re-registering.
A user with a short brief or concept can use GaanaAI’s stated brief-to-vision positioning as the starting point for exploring a visual outcome.
A user deciding whether to proceed can evaluate the product from the landing page’s limited public information and account requirements before signing up.
The source pages show a sign-up flow that collects first name, last name, email, and phone number, and says the email will be used to send an OTP code. It does not show the rest of the onboarding flow.
The product pages do not describe specific output formats. The visible message, "Turn your briefs into vision," suggests a brief-to-visual workflow, but the rendered pages do not explain the exact outputs.
The collected pages do not show a pricing table, plan names, or limits. The pricing URL currently renders a sign-in page instead of plan details.
The source pages present a sign-in and sign-up flow, which suggests account access is required, but they do not document team features or shared workspaces.
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