Wyvid
Use case

Wyvid for in-house teams

Test marketing concepts at the speed of design, not the speed of engineering tickets.

The internal workflow problem

Marketing wants to A/B test a new landing page. Design has the mocks ready in a day. Engineering is heads-down on product work and the experiment can't get a slot for two sprints. By the time the page ships, the campaign is over.

Wyvid lets the design team — or a marketing operator — turn the mock into a working page without needing to file a frontend ticket. It's not a replacement for the engineering team's work; it's a way to validate concepts before that work is justified.

How teams use it

  • Concept validation. Spin up three different versions of a landing page from three Figma frames; route traffic to all three for a week; pick a winner; only then commission a real engineering build.
  • Internal microsites. Recruiting pages, event pages, partner pages — the kind of one-off sites that don't deserve a sprint of dev time but still need to look right.
  • Pitch decks → microsites. Take a Canva pitch deck and turn it into a sharable web microsite for prospects.

Recommended plan

For occasional marketing experiments, Pro ($20/mo, three sites) is enough. Larger marketing teams running a weekly cadence usually move to Business ($30, five sites) or Agency (unlimited).

What this isn't

Wyvid isn't a CMS, a marketing automation platform, or an A/B testing tool. You'd still pair it with whatever you use for analytics, traffic splitting, and lead capture. What Wyvid does is collapse the time between "we have a design" and "we have a working URL" — the rest of your stack handles the rest of the job.

Stop waiting on the engineering queue.

Wyvid turns marketing mockups into working pages in hours.