The pattern we keep seeing
An agency wins a $15k–$50k website project. The designer does great work in Figma over a week. Then the build phase eats fifteen developer days because someone has to rebuild the same boilerplate (header, footer, hero, three feature sections, pricing, contact form) by hand. The margin gets thinner the more sites you ship.
Wyvid attacks that boilerplate. The first 60% of any sitebuild — the part that's structurally similar across 80% of client projects — comes out of Wyvid in the first hour. Your team picks up where it gets interesting: brand-specific motion, custom interactions, integrations.
What changes day-to-day
- Design handoff is now a link. The designer pastes the Figma URL into Wyvid; an hour later the build is in the dashboard.
- Client feedback is faster. Use Wyvid's chat iteration on early rounds — copy changes, layout tweaks, color experiments — without spinning up a dev environment.
- Hand-off to dev is cleaner. Your developers start from working Bootstrap 5 markup, not from a Figma file.
- Capacity goes up without headcount. The same team can comfortably take on 30–50% more projects.
Recommended plan
For most agencies, the Agency plan at $500/mo pays for itself the first project. Unlimited sitebuilds, top of the queue, the WordPress option always on. If you're running fewer than five client projects a month, the Business plan is also a fit.
What Wyvid won't replace
Real strategic work — brand systems, custom CMS schemas, complex integrations, motion design, performance optimization for high-traffic sites. Wyvid produces a strong starting point, not a finished product for every project. Your team's craft is still the reason clients pay.