vs Foxit eSign
Foxit is best known as a PDF editor and reader for internal document workflows. Foxit eSign adds e-signature capability. What it does not do: collect client information through a guided interview and map those answers into your PDF fields automatically. That is the workflow Docuplete is built for.
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| Feature | Docuplete | Foxit eSign |
|---|---|---|
| Guided client interview | ✓ Yes | ✗ No |
| Auto-fill PDF from client answers | ✓ Yes | ✗ No |
| E-signatures | ✓ Yes | ✓ Yes |
| OTP identity verification | ✓ Yes | ✗ No |
| RFC 3161 trusted timestamp | ✓ Yes | ∼ Limited |
| Full compliance audit trail | ✓ Yes | ∼ Limited |
| Tokenised link (no signer account) | ✓ Yes | ✓ Yes |
| BAA for HIPAA | Yes (qualifying plans) | ∼ Limited |
| REST API for headless mode | ✓ Yes | ∼ Limited |
| Webhooks | ✓ Yes | ∼ Limited |
When to use which
The core distinction
Foxit eSign is an extension of a PDF editor — it signs documents you have already prepared. Docuplete starts earlier: collecting the data, filling the form, then collecting the signature.
If your client needs to fill a form before signing, Foxit still requires that data to be collected and entered manually before the signature request is sent.
Docuplete is built specifically for professional services — financial advisors, law firms, healthcare providers — who send the same PDF types repeatedly. Foxit is a general PDF tool.
Docuplete records OTP-verified identity, IP, device, RFC 3161 timestamp, and SHA-256 document hash. Purpose-built for regulatory compliance environments.
Docuplete handles data collection, PDF fill, and e-signature in one client-facing session.
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