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Write a great prompt

Your team is good at filling in gaps, but the more they know, the closer the first version lands. You do not need to be technical. You just need to be clear. Here is what works.

Start with the business and the visitor. “A website for my flower shop” is fine; “a website for my flower shop, for locals buying bouquets and couples planning weddings” is better. Who the site is for shapes every choice your team makes.

Talk about what you want to happen, not how to build it. “Let people book a table” beats “add a form component”. Your team picks the how.

List the pages you want: Home, Shop, About, Contact. Forget one? Just ask for it later.

A few words on style go a long way: “warm and elegant”, “clean and modern”, “bright and playful”. Mention colors you like, or a business whose look you admire.

Once you are in the studio, change things in small, clear asks: “make the hero image bigger”, then “add a map to the contact page”. Small steps are easier to get right than one giant list.

For a first build or a big change, choose Plan it. Your co-founder Noor asks a few sharp questions and turns your idea into a plan before anything gets built. It is the surest way to a result that fits. See Build your first website.

Not sure where to begin? Pick a template from Start from a template and describe your twist. Starting from something close is faster than a blank page. The Prompt library has ready-made prompts you can copy.

A good example

Build a website for Fleur & Stem, a boutique florist for design-conscious locals and couples planning weddings. Make it warm and editorial, with large photography and a refined serif for headings. Pages: Home, Shop, Weddings and Events, About, and Contact. Add a “Book a consultation” button in the header.

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