How to write a website prompt that AI builders actually follow
AI builders like Bolt, v0, Lovable, and Cursor are only as good as the brief you give them. Here's how to write a prompt that gets a finished site on the first try.
Artagers GrigoryanAI website builders feel like magic until you actually use one. You type "make me a modern site for my coffee shop," hit enter, and get back something generic — a stock hero image, lorem-ipsum copy, and a layout that ignores half of what you meant. The tool didn't fail. The prompt did.
A one-line request forces the AI to guess: who the site is for, what pages it needs, how it should feel, and which tech to use. Every guess is a place where the result drifts from what you wanted. The fix isn't a longer prompt — it's a structured brief.
Why a brief beats a one-liner
A good brief removes guesswork. Instead of hoping the model infers your brand voice, you state it. Instead of letting it invent a page structure, you list the pages. The same AI builder, given the same two minutes of your time up front, produces a dramatically better first draft — and you spend far less time going back and forth.
What every website prompt should cover
The briefs that work read like a confident handoff to a senior developer. Cover these eight areas and the AI rarely has to ask a follow-up question:
- Project identity — what the site is, who it serves, and what makes it different.
- Design direction — visual style, color palette (with hex values), and typographic mood.
- Tone and copy — the voice of headlines and calls to action.
- Pages and content — each page and the key sections it must contain.
- Features and functionality — forms, integrations, animations, and special behavior.
- Code quality — accessibility, semantic HTML, performance, and error/loading states.
- Tech stack — the framework or platform, and why it fits this project.
- Content handling — what's ready to use versus what the AI should write.
Be specific where it counts
"Modern and clean" means something different to everyone. "Generous whitespace,
a geometric sans-serif, a near-black #0A0A0A on warm off-white #FAF9F6, and
one bold accent" means the same thing to everyone — including the model. The
more concrete your design and tone notes, the less the AI improvises.
The same goes for pages. "A few pages" invites guessing; "Home, Services, Pricing, About, and a contact form with name/email/message" gets you exactly those, structured the way you expect.
Let the brief do the heavy lifting
Writing all of that from scratch every time is tedious — which is exactly why most people don't. That's the whole reason we built the Website Prompt Generator: it asks a short series of focused questions and assembles a complete, professional brief you can paste straight into any AI builder.
Answer a few questions, copy the brief, paste it into Bolt, v0, Lovable, Cursor, or your tool of choice — and start from a finished draft instead of a guess.