Gentle help for your website
Short, plain-English notes for describing your business, shaping your first version, and asking for changes without stress.
How to describe your shop when you're not technical
Start with what you make, who buys it, and how you want people to feel. That's enough to begin.
Coming soonWhat your first website should include
A clear home page, direct contact path, strong examples, and copy that matches your business.
Coming soonHow to ask for changes without starting over
You can ask for softer colors, simpler wording, new photos, or a clearer button. Small notes are welcome.
Coming soonOlder research notes
How previews, ownership, and your real domain work
If you worry about owning what you make, this explains the difference between a DriftLess preview, a download, GitHub handoff, and your real website domain.
How to describe your idea so AI builds the right first draft
You do not need magic wording. Say who it is for, what it should do, what it should not do, and where the first version should stop.
Why AI forgets your project, and how to avoid repeating yourself
A bigger AI chat is not the same as project memory. Useful work needs decisions, preferences, and corrections to carry forward.
A five-step way to finish the first useful version
Most AI projects stall because the first version grows too large. This framework keeps the draft focused enough to finish.
Why AI adds features you never asked for
AI tries to be helpful, but helpful can become too much. Here is why extra pages and complex flows appear in drafts.
The simplest stack for a founder who just needs to launch
You do not need to understand every technology choice to start. You need a visible first draft, clear ownership, and a path to launch.
What to check before trusting an AI-made business tool
Even when a draft looks good, the important question is whether the main flow, data, and handoff are safe enough to keep building.
How to build with AI without losing control of the project
AI can move quickly, but speed only helps when the draft stays close to the goal. Here is how to keep control.
Why AI-built websites wander away from the original idea
A plain-English look at why AI sometimes adds pages, features, or complexity you never requested, and how to keep the first draft focused.
How AI credits work when you start a website or tool
A simple explanation of hosted credits, optional advanced AI accounts, and how to think about cost before you keep building.
How DriftLess keeps your first draft on target
A draft is only useful if it still matches the business idea. DriftLess checks the result against what you asked for.
A small first version can cost less when the scope stays small
A practical story about staying focused, avoiding unnecessary features, and keeping AI build costs easier to understand.
Why rating and correcting drafts makes future work better
When your preferences, corrections, and quality bar stay attached to the project, each next draft can become more useful.