Your Prompt Is the Agent’s Only Reference
The biggest gap between what you want and what the agent designs comes down to your prompt. You have a picture in your head — the agent doesn’t. The more you can show and describe that picture in your prompt, the closer the result will be.Upload a Mood Board or UI Inspiration
If you have screenshots, mood boards, or examples of designs you like, upload them and tell the agent what they are. This is one of the most effective ways to get great design results. For example:- Collect a few screenshots of websites or apps whose style you like
- Upload them and say: “This is my mood board. I want my site to have a similar feel — clean layout, lots of white space, modern typography.”
- Or upload a single screenshot and say: “I like how this site does their hero section. Design mine with a similar layout but using my brand colors.”
Describe the Feeling, Not Just the Layout
Instead of only saying where things go, tell the agent what vibe you’re going for. Words like “modern,” “playful,” “corporate,” “minimal,” or “bold” go a long way. Example:“I want a landing page that feels clean and professional — something like a fintech company. Mostly white space with a bold headline.”Pair this with a reference image and the agent will have a strong understanding of your vision.
Be Specific About Colors and Style
If you have brand colors or preferences, state them upfront. Otherwise the agent will pick something reasonable, but it might not match your vision.- “Use dark blue and white as the main colors.”
- “Keep it in grayscale — no bright colors.”
- “Use rounded corners and soft shadows for a friendly look.”
Build One Section at a Time
Asking for an entire page at once gives the agent a lot to juggle. You’ll get better results by going section by section:- “Design a navigation bar with our logo and three menu links.”
- “Add a hero section with a big headline, subtitle, and a signup button.”
- “Below that, add a section showing three features with icons.”
Iterate Instead of Starting Over
If the first result is close but not quite right, tell the agent what to change rather than starting from scratch. Instead of:“That’s not what I wanted. Redo it.”Try:
“I like the layout, but make the heading bigger and change the background to light gray.”Small adjustments cost fewer credits and build on work that’s already done.
Tips
- Upload references early. Share your mood board, screenshots, or inspiration images at the start of the conversation — before asking the agent to build anything.
- Say what you like about each reference. “I like the typography on this one” or “I like how this site uses cards” helps the agent pick up on the right details.
- Use everyday words. You don’t need design terminology. Descriptions like “clean,” “bold,” “playful,” or “professional” work well.

