As AI makes website creation faster than ever, the real competitive advantage is no longer building a website. It’s designing the experience that turns visitors into customers.
Artificial intelligence has fundamentally changed the way websites are created. What once required weeks of planning, design, content creation, and development can now be accomplished in a matter of hours. AI can generate layouts, write copy, create imagery, recommend page structures, and even produce fully functional websites with remarkable speed.
There is no question that this represents a major technological shift, and in many ways, a positive one. At Studio Baram, AI has become an integral part of our own creative process. We use it to accelerate research, explore concepts, improve efficiency, and automate repetitive tasks. Like every technological advancement before it, AI allows us to spend less time producing and more time thinking.
However, as the technology continues to improve, an interesting shift is taking place.
The conversation is no longer about whether AI can build a website. It clearly can.
The more important question has become whether a website, regardless of how it was created, is actually capable of supporting business growth.
Over the past year, I’ve spoken with an increasing number of companies that chose to build their websites using AI-powered platforms. Their experiences are remarkably similar. Most describe an exciting beginning: the website was completed quickly, the design looked professional, the content appeared polished, and launching the site felt like a significant achievement.
The challenges emerged later.
As their businesses evolved, new requirements appeared. Additional services needed to be introduced, new markets required localized content, CRM systems had to be integrated, marketing automation became more sophisticated, and sales processes matured. Many discovered that while building the website had been surprisingly easy, adapting it to an evolving business was far more difficult.
Yet, in my experience, technical flexibility is only part of the story.
The larger issue lies in how most websites are conceived from the very beginning.
Traditionally, websites are planned around pages. Teams discuss the homepage, the About page, Services, Case Studies, and Contact. The conversation focuses on what each page should contain and how each section should look.
Customers, however, don’t experience websites as collections of pages.
They experience them as journeys.
Every visitor arrives with questions, expectations, uncertainties, and a specific problem they hope to solve. Long before they decide whether to contact a company, they are constantly evaluating what they see. Does this company understand my industry? Can I trust them? Do they seem experienced? Are they different from the alternatives I’m considering? Should I keep reading, or should I leave?
Whether consciously or subconsciously, visitors are making decisions throughout the entire experience.
This is why we believe websites should not be designed page by page.
They should be designed decision by decision.
Before discussing layouts or visual style, we begin by understanding the customer’s journey. We identify what visitors need to understand within their first few seconds on the website, which concerns must be addressed before trust can develop, when differentiation becomes meaningful, and how every interaction should naturally prepare them for the next step.
Only after this journey has been carefully designed does the visual design begin.
At Studio Baram, we refer to this strategic approach as Customer Journey Architecture.
Rather than viewing a website as a collection of digital pages, we see it as a carefully orchestrated business system that guides visitors from curiosity to clarity, from confidence to trust, and ultimately toward action.
Every headline serves a purpose.
Every message appears at the right moment.
Every piece of proof is introduced when it is most persuasive.
Every call-to-action becomes part of a larger conversation rather than an isolated button at the bottom of a page.
As AI continues to democratize website creation, I believe this layer of strategic thinking will become increasingly valuable.
Technology will continue becoming faster, smarter, and more accessible. Templates will improve. Content generation will become more sophisticated. Building a website will become easier every year.
Designing meaningful customer experiences, however, will remain a fundamentally human discipline.
The businesses that succeed in the AI era will not necessarily be those that build websites the fastest.
They will be those that understand their customers the best and intentionally design every digital interaction around that understanding.
Anyone can build a website.
Designing the journey that transforms a visitor into a customer is something entirely different.













