What website builder (CMS/custom code) do you use?

Ghost Kitty
51 replies
I use Ucraft for my site. It's a simple website builder. My bigger clients use HubSpot and WordPress. My small clients use Webflow. But they complain that it adds a lot of useless code. You should edit code manually to get good rankings from performance tests (Core Web Vitals). My tech clients use custom code + a lot of people recommend Framer. What do you use?

Replies

Ghost Kitty
The LinkedIn Inbound Playbook
The LinkedIn Inbound Playbook
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Andrey Bozhjev
@olenabomko Yeah) Softr integrates nicely with databases that are deployed in Airtable. Tilda is great for quick creation of lendings.
Ivan Dudin
WordPress + Stackable extension = perfect combo for no-code site construction. Live example you can look in our site: https://useblocks.io
Moin Shaikh
I use Shopify and WordPress. My non-ecommerce clients prefer WordPress and ecommerce clients mostly go with Shopify. Both platforms provide simple, easy, and secured CMS that let non-techie clients edit/maintain websites without requiring any technical help.
Paul Mit
Tilda, Webflow
Ghost Kitty
The LinkedIn Inbound Playbook
The LinkedIn Inbound Playbook
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Steve Lou
Webflow + flowbase and you have everything you need!
Ghost Kitty
The LinkedIn Inbound Playbook
The LinkedIn Inbound Playbook
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Adam Lui
<3 Docsify, it lets you type up pages using simple Markdown, host for free on GitHub, then it renders it as HTML you can make beautiful using CSS
Ghost Kitty
The LinkedIn Inbound Playbook
The LinkedIn Inbound Playbook
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Pietro Lungarini
CodeWiz | AI Coding Companion
CodeWiz | AI Coding Companion
Angular - Javascript Framework Big supporter of Angular because: - You can have a great organization of code and files (as it works with components) - Easy to learn - Great documentation (by Google)
Ashmil Hussain
Our website is natively built using React and NextJS, with Contentful serving as our headless CMS for blogs.
Ghost Kitty
The LinkedIn Inbound Playbook
The LinkedIn Inbound Playbook
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Ashmil Hussain
@olenabomko, Only developers can modify the design, while Contentful is used for updating or publishing content and images.
Webflow
Ghost Kitty
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The LinkedIn Inbound Playbook
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Leena Chitnis
RuffRest® Ultimate Dog Bed
RuffRest® Ultimate Dog Bed
I just use Shopify plug-and-play templates and hire a coder to make it custom
Ghost Kitty
The LinkedIn Inbound Playbook
The LinkedIn Inbound Playbook
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Leena Chitnis
RuffRest® Ultimate Dog Bed
RuffRest® Ultimate Dog Bed
@olenabomko Yup! It's great. You don't have to be a techie at all to use it and you can make absolutely stunning websites like this: timberdog.com -- that's my site.
tilda is best
Sergei Petrov
We use custom code for the product, and Wix for the landing page. I also heard that Bubble is good, but I didn’t use it. Tried Webflow - also ok.
Ghost Kitty
The LinkedIn Inbound Playbook
The LinkedIn Inbound Playbook
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Kane
I recently created a landing page and blog for a new product using Sanity, and I feel really good about it. It's perfect for those with customization needs and some knowledge of frontend development, but who don't want to dive into heavy CMSs like WordPress. One thing that's especially helpful is that I needed my blog to be located in a subdirectory, like xxx.com/blog, and Sanity made that really easy to achieve. 😎
Ghost Kitty
The LinkedIn Inbound Playbook
The LinkedIn Inbound Playbook
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Arsen Batyuchok 🇺🇦
I mostly use Contentful as headless CMS, along with an earlier mentioned product called Control :)
Christin Koehler
Squarespace is a website builder that is known for its modern design. It is a good choice for projects that need a stylish and professional website.
David strc
Blogger is a free blog platform that is owned by Google. It is a good choice for projects that need a simple blog
Harsh Vyas
Pagemaker.io
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AppManager by CompanyDNA AI
AppManager by CompanyDNA AI
We are using Builder.io because it is very flexible and developers can edit code more freely.