Build a Startup Website with AI
Early-stage startups need a website before almost anything else — investors check it, candidates search for it, journalists link to it. But hiring a designer and developer for a marketing site when you are pre-revenue feels wrong. You need something polished enough to be credible, built fast enough to not distract from the actual product. AI coding agents solve this problem completely.
AccessAgent.ai's API was built for AI agents. Your agent reads the deployment guide, generates your entire startup website from a single descriptive prompt, uploads it as a zip, and hands you a live URL with SSL. No dashboard, no browser needed, no static site generator to configure. One conversation, one site.
What Your Agent Builds
A startup website serves a different purpose than a SaaS landing page. It is not just about conversion — it is about legitimacy, storytelling, and recruiting. Here is what a strong startup site includes:
- Hero with mission statement — Not a product pitch, but a vision. "Making personalized education accessible to everyone" tells visitors why your company exists. The hero should communicate purpose in one sentence, with a supporting line about what the product actually does.
- Product overview — 3-4 key features or capabilities presented visually. This is not a feature comparison — it is a high-level explanation of what your product does and why it matters. Icons or illustrations help break up the text.
- Team section — Names, roles, and short bios for founders and key team members. This builds trust, especially for B2B startups where buyers want to know who is behind the product. Include headshot placeholders that you swap for real photos later.
- Press and investor signals — A logo bar showing press mentions or notable investors. Even placeholder logos demonstrate the pattern. "Backed by Y Combinator" or "Featured in TechCrunch" — these signals compound credibility immediately.
- Careers CTA — A section that signals you are hiring, even if you only have one open role. Links to job postings or a simple "We're hiring — reach out" with an email address. This is how many early hires discover startups.
- Footer with contact — Email, social links, and a physical address if you have one. Legal links (terms, privacy) signal professionalism. A simple copyright line with the company name anchors the page.
Build It Now
This prompt describes a fictional AI education startup with enough detail for the agent to generate a complete, realistic website. Swap in your own company details and you have a real site.
Tips for a Credible Startup Site
Lead with the Problem You Solve
Investors and customers both care more about the problem than the solution. "Students lose 40% of class time on material they've already mastered" is more compelling than "We use AI to personalize learning." State the problem in your hero section, then present your product as the answer.
Keep Team Bios Short
Two sentences per person is plenty. Name the most impressive credential (company, degree, achievement) and one human detail. "Former ML lead at Google Brain. Obsessed with making complex concepts intuitive." Long paragraphs go unread. If someone wants more, they will check LinkedIn.
Add Real Metrics If You Have Them
Numbers make abstract claims concrete. "10,000 students" beats "thousands of students." "93% completion rate" beats "high engagement." Even early metrics matter — if you have 50 beta users with great retention, say so. Include metrics in your prompt and the agent will design callout blocks for them.
Make the CTA Specific
"Get Started Free" converts better than "Learn More." "Join the Waitlist" is more specific than "Sign Up." Tell your agent exactly what the CTA should say and where it should link. A vague CTA is a missed conversion. If you are pre-launch, "Request Early Access" works well — it implies exclusivity.
Ready to launch your startup site?
Give your AI agent the prompt above and get a polished startup website in minutes.
Read the API Guide