With Ultron you can build a $10,000-quality website end-to-end: it writes the plan, builds the actual site, puts it live on the internet, and hands you a real link you can share.
This page is the full walkthrough. You describe your business in plain English, Ultron writes your website plan, builds the actual site, deploys it to the internet, and hands you a real link you can share.
How it works
Ultron does both jobs a website needs, strategy and build, in one place.
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The strategist. You describe your business in plain English and Ultron turns that into a complete website plan: the pages, sections, copy (the words on the page) and style, written as one clear brief.
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The builder. Ultron then builds the actual site, deploys it to the internet, and gives you a live link you can share. No code, no hosting setup, no developer.
The exact steps
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Go to Ultron (a free account is all you need) and describe your business to it. The next section shows exactly what to cover.
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Ask it to turn that into a website plan.
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Ultron may ask you 2 or 3 quick questions first. Answer them, and it writes the full specs: pages, sections, copy and style.
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Ultron then takes the plan, actually builds the site, deploys it, and hands back a real live link.
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Use the preview section to watch your edits get implemented live as you request changes.
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Never start from a blank page: browse the inspiration examples inside Ultron if you're not sure what you want.
How to describe your business (this part matters most)
The quality of your website plan depends entirely on the quality of your description. A sentence or two on each of these is all Ultron needs:
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The basics. Your business name, what you sell or do, and roughly what it costs.
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Who it's for. Your ideal customer and the problem you solve for them. "Busy salon owners who lose bookings after hours" beats "everyone."
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Messaging. Your one-line pitch, your 2 or 3 biggest benefits, and how you want to sound: warm, premium, playful, expert.
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Brand identity. Your colours, fonts and overall vibe. If you don't have these yet, name a brand or website whose look you love and say "like this."
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Website sections. The pages you know you need: home, about, services or products, pricing, testimonials, FAQ, contact. Unsure? Say so, and Ultron will propose a structure.
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Contact details. The email, phone, location or socials you want on the site, and how people book or pay you (a booking link, DMs, email).
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CTAs (calls to action). The ONE thing you want visitors to do: book a call, buy, join a waitlist, DM you. Every great website is built backwards from this, so decide it first.
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Proof. Testimonials, results, client logos, follower counts, years of experience. Anything that makes a stranger trust you.
Don't overthink it. Messy bullet points are fine, Ultron's job is to turn them into something polished.
A prompt to get you started
Paste this into Ultron and fill in the bracket:
Tips for a site you're proud of
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Edit in plain English. Once the site is live, just tell Ultron what to change ("make the big headline at the top larger, add a testimonials section") and watch it happen in the preview.
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Check it on your phone. Most of your visitors will be on mobile, so click through every page on your phone before you share the link.
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One goal per page. The best-converting sites ask visitors to do one thing. If your homepage has five different buttons, cut it to one.
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Swap in your real photos. Ultron starts with placeholder images. Upload your own headshot and product photos, a real face converts better than stock.
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Want your own domain? The free link works to start. When you're ready, buy a domain (about $15/year) and connect it inside Ultron.
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Know the pricing. The free plan is enough to explore and get started; building and keeping a site live long-term realistically needs a paid plan.
A $10k-looking site, live
That's the whole thing, working.
Run this on autopilot.
Everything in this guide becomes an agent inside Ultron: set it up once, keep it running. You review, it executes.
