In this article, you will find out how to create full pages quickly and effectively using the AI Page Generator. You will learn how to plan your page structure, choose the right style, write effective prompts, and refine your content through re-generation for optimal results.
Best Tips for Generating Pages with Onepage AI
Onepage generates pages, not full websites.
Keep in mind that the AI focuses on individual pages, not an entire website.Onepage AI does not copy other pages or technology stacks.
The AI creates content and layouts from scratch, so it won’t duplicate other sites.More sections usually work better.
Try not to reduce the number of sections too much in the planner. Using fewer sections can make it harder for the AI to understand the structure of the page.Page generation is for layouts only.
Onepage AI currently does not set up pixels, analytics, or custom code. You’ll need to handle these separately.Avoid “tone of voice” commands.
The Style setting already includes tone of voice and visual style, so you don’t need to give separate instructions about tone.Font and color randomization works best on single-page projects.
If your project has only one page, the AI may experiment with fonts and colors, often creating visually appealing results.
How it works
The Page Generator helps you create full pages in just a few clicks. It’s especially good for homepages and single-purpose landing pages. You don’t need long prompts. Style and clarity matter more than the number of words.
⚠️ Important: When you start a generation, the entire page is replaced with new content. A confirmation message will appear before this happens.
Be careful when using it on existing projects, because once you confirm, the old content cannot be restored.
If you’d like a step-by-step guide on using this feature, check out our article on the AI Assistant.
Planning Phase
Before the page is generated, you’ll enter the planning phase.
Here you can add, remove, or reorder sections. You can also include multiple sections of the same type.
For example, you can have two different “About us” sections on the same page.
If the first result doesn’t feel right, you can always re-generate.
Re-generation keeps the same structure, but rewrites the content and design.
If you want to change the layout completely, restart the process and adjust the structure again during planning.
In practice, the best results often come after a few rounds of re-generation.
Choosing a Style
Styles shape the entire look and feel of your page. Switching from one style to another can make the difference between a corporate homepage and a high-converting sales funnel.
Each style has its own personality:
Direct – Inspired by direct-response marketing. Creates urgency, mirrors proven funnels, and turns prompts into sales-driven pages.
Formal – Polished, professional, and trustworthy. Great for industries where credibility and a timeless tone matter.
Modern – Clean, minimal, and forward-looking. Balances proven layouts with experimental design touches, built to today’s standards.
There’s no “best” style overall - only the one that fits your use case.
A consulting firm may lean towards the Formal style, a SaaS startup may prefer Modern, while an e-commerce campaign often works best with Direct.
Writing effective prompts
A good prompt usually has two layers.
The core: your business name, industry, location, or the area you serve.
Optional details: such as offers, pricing, or colors.
Together they give the system enough direction without being too rigid.
Here are some good examples of starting prompts:
“Landing page for an agency that enables AI for small businesses. Named TurboAII, based in Düsseldorf.”
“Solar panel installation company. USP: a 4-day process from start to finish. Serving all of Germany.”
“Subscription-based meal service. Fresh, tailored food every day. Three weekly plans: $199 / $299 / $450. Serving the US.”
“Financial advisor focused on SaaS companies.”
“Holistic health practice offering yoga, meditation, and wellness coaching. Current offer: free test lesson, valid 3 days.”
Notice that each example starts with the core idea, and then add some extra details like pricing, a USP, or a limited-time offer.
Ineffective prompts
Bad prompts usually fall into one of three traps: they are technical, too rigid, or too contradictory.
Examples of bad prompts:
“Build me a website with a hero section, then features, then testimonials, then a pricing section with 3 columns. Use blue and green gradients. Put the logo in the top left and make the footer sticky.”
→ Gives too many layout instructions.
“Website for an AI SaaS that does everything. Targeting teens and enterprise executives at the same time. Make it look minimal, but also flashy with animations.”
→ Confusing and contradictory.
“Create a landing page using HTML5, CSS, and JavaScript. The code should include a responsive navbar with dropdowns and a parallax background.”
→ Technical details not relevant here.
“Website for my crypto project with 10 pages: hero, mission, tokenomics, roadmap, FAQs, contact, partners, blog, careers, and privacy policy. Each section must have exactly 200 words.”
→ Overly detailed and restrictive. Focuses on a full website rather than a single page, which can lead to weaker results.
Adding useful details
Once you have your core prompt, you can extend it with extra context.
Short notes about your offer (“Free lesson, limited spots”), your USP (“Organic products only”), or a preferred color (“Make green dominant”) work very well.
You can also include pricing, service details, or team information.
📌Note: The key is to give the AI room to ideate. Overloading it with rigid rules usually makes results worse.
Extended Prompt Examples
Here are a few examples of strong extended prompts:
“Eco-friendly cleaning service based in Munich. USP: organic products only. Include a pricing section with three packages. Highlight team members with photos.”
“Personal trainer in Berlin. Offering online and in-person sessions. CTA: free consultation call. Preferred color: deep navy blue.”
“Marketing agency named BrightGrowth, serving startups across Europe. USP: fast results, transparent pricing. Add CTA for a free 30-minute strategy call.”
Each example mixes a clear core with one or two extra details.
Re-generation in Practice
The best results usually come after a few tries. Re-generate until you see something you like, that’s part of the process.
📌 Please note:
If you want to keep the structure but change the tone, just hit re-generate.
If you want a different layout, go back to the planning phase and start fresh.
Unlike many builders where “re-generate” just shuffles words around, Onepage is designed to actually improve the page with each new attempt.
📝 Summary: Pick the right style, keep prompts simple, and don’t hesitate to re-generate. With a few iterations, you’ll always land on a page that works.
💡Do you have any feedback about this article? Please let us know through our live chat or at support@onepage.io, so we may keep it up to date. Thank you! 🙂