Describe the website you want to create
Use the prompt area to plan landing pages, service pages, portfolio pages, product pages, or simple business websites.
Turn a business idea into a clearer website direction with page structure, section ideas, content flow, and visual layout planning.
Describe your business, choose a page type, and turn a short prompt into a clearer website layout direction.
Use the prompt area to plan landing pages, service pages, portfolio pages, product pages, or simple business websites.
Use the AI Website Builder to shape practical website ideas for businesses, creators, campaigns, and online projects.
Plan conversion-focused landing pages for offers, services, products, and campaigns.
Outline homepage, service cards, testimonials, FAQs, and contact sections for local businesses.
Structure project showcases, personal sites, creative portfolios, and professional profiles.
Turn messy ideas into clearer sections, page hierarchy, and user journey direction.
Move from a plain business idea to a structured website concept with sections, flow, and page direction.
Describe the business, audience, goal, offer, and preferred tone in simple language.
Select a direction such as landing page, service site, portfolio, product page, or campaign page.
Use the generated concept as a starting point, then adjust sections, copy, hierarchy, and calls-to-action.
Pair website concepts with nearby tools for logos, images, text, and creative brand direction.
Quick answers for planning website concepts, using prompts, and turning rough business ideas into clearer page direction.
You can use it to plan landing pages, service websites, portfolios, product pages, campaign pages, and simple business site concepts.
No. Describe your business, audience, and page goal in plain language to start shaping a website direction.
Yes. You can ask for a hero, benefits, services, testimonials, FAQs, pricing, contact section, or other logical page blocks.
Yes. Treat the generated concept as a planning draft, then adjust sections, copy, CTA placement, and visual direction.
An AI website builder can help a business move from a rough idea to a clearer structure, but the strongest websites still begin with the customer journey.
A website is not only a design project. It should help visitors understand the offer, trust the business, compare options, request a quote, book a service, or complete a purchase. Before generating a layout, identify the main pages, the audience for each one, and the action each page should support.
For service businesses, those decisions often connect to sales documents. A landing page may lead to a quote request, an approved project may move to an invoice, and a paid job may need a receipt for records.
AI can suggest sections, headlines, calls to action, service descriptions, FAQs, and layout ideas. Those suggestions should be reviewed against the real offer. A business still needs accurate pricing logic, service boundaries, location details, credentials, policies, and proof that supports customer trust.
Website drafts should also avoid promising work the business does not provide. Clear language helps prevent unqualified leads and makes later billing easier because the customer already understands the service scope.
A useful website draft should bring together copy, imagery, navigation, and customer actions. The text drafting tool can help refine service descriptions, while the image workflow can explore visuals that support the page. Those assets should guide the visitor toward a practical next step rather than decorate the page without purpose.
When a website project is client work, the scope should list pages, copy, design, revisions, forms, integrations, and delivery responsibilities. A web designer can use a web design billing record or a project estimate depending on whether the work is already approved.
Save the approved sitemap, page copy, image notes, launch date, domain details, and client approvals. Those records help explain future maintenance, content updates, redesign work, or additional requests. A good website workflow does not end at launch; it creates a foundation for ongoing service, support, and billing.