How to prompt
Write prompts that get you the result you want, faster — with examples.
The builder is an agent: it makes strong decisions on its own, so you don't need to over-specify. But a little structure gets you to the right result faster.
Be specific about what matters
- Say what it's for. *“a dentist office”* gives a very different result than *“a techno record label.”*
- Name the sections you want: *“hero, services, pricing, testimonials, contact form.”*
- Mention the vibe: colors, font feel (serif/sans), tone (playful vs corporate), and any brand colors as hex.
- Call out must-haves: a booking form, a menu, a gallery of N images, a specific CTA.
Iterate in small steps
After the first build, change one thing at a time: *“Make the header sticky.” “Swap the hero photo for a gradient.” “Tighten the spacing on mobile.”* Small, clear asks are faster and easier to review than one giant prompt.
Good prompt examples
A one-page site for “Bloom”, a flower studio.
Sections: hero with a soft pastel gradient, our story, a 6-item
bouquet gallery, pricing tiers, and a contact form (name, email,
message). Elegant serif headings, lots of whitespace, soft pink + sage.Add a sticky top nav with links to each section, and a "Book now"
button that scrolls to the contact form. Make it collapse into a
hamburger menu on mobile.When something doesn't change
If you ask for a change and it didn't take effect, just say so plainly: *“That didn't change — the button is still rounded.”* The agent will re-read the page, find what actually controls it, and fix it. You can also revert and try a clearer instruction.
Pasting a screenshot of a design you like is often faster than describing it — see Images & files.