Building Pages

How to create pages in Coherence Sites using blocks, prompts, and reusable page structure.

Pages in Coherence Sites are built from reusable sections instead of one-off templates. That gives your team a consistent visual language while still leaving room to shape each page for its job.

Start with the page goal

Before you start dragging blocks around, answer two questions:

  1. What should this page help the visitor do?
  2. What proof or context do they need before taking that action?

That usually gives you the page outline:

  • hero
  • supporting features or workflow
  • proof or trust section
  • CTA

Common page patterns

Landing page

Best for:

  • launches
  • campaigns
  • product overviews
  • vertical or audience pages

Typical structure:

  1. Hero with headline and CTA
  2. Feature or benefit section
  3. Proof or examples
  4. CTA banner

Resource page

Best for:

  • template libraries
  • content collections
  • category hubs

Typical structure:

  1. Intro section
  2. Filter or category controls
  3. Card grid
  4. Supporting CTA

Docs page

Best for:

  • help centers
  • product onboarding
  • workflows and reference content

Typical structure:

  1. Title and short explanation
  2. Step-by-step content
  3. Related links
  4. Next action

Tips for working with blocks

Start broad, then tighten

Don’t perfect the first section before the rest of the page exists. Get the overall structure in place first, then come back for copy and visual polish.

Reuse proven sections

If a section works on one page, use the same block pattern elsewhere. Repetition is a feature, not a weakness, when it helps visitors understand your site faster.

Keep sections distinct

Each section should earn its space. If two adjacent sections are saying the same thing, combine them or remove one.

Let the page breathe

Dense pages can work, but most marketing pages get better when each section has a clear job and enough whitespace to separate ideas.

When to use prompts

Prompt-based page creation is most useful when:

  • you need a fast first draft
  • you already know the rough message
  • you want help assembling a strong initial structure

It works best when your prompt includes:

  • the audience
  • the offer
  • the page goal
  • the tone
  • any proof or constraints that matter

When to stay manual

Manual editing is better when:

  • the story is already clear
  • you’re refining a high-stakes page
  • you care about exact pacing and section order
  • you’re updating an existing page instead of creating a new one

Next steps