If you’ve ever felt like you needed to be a designer, developer, marketer, and UX expert all at once -you’re not alone. But with the right tools and feedback loops, you can make huge strides fast. Here’s how I quickly leveled up the landing page for Naminique, my AI-powered business name generator, in just about 45 minutes.
You’ll know this soon, but my post is how I used Cursor, ChatGPT (GPT-4), and some product instincts to make a bunch of small tweaks that compounded into a clean, polished landing page – LIKE A BOSS.
Step-by-Step: Iterating With AI and Cursor
Step 1: Launch With a Functional MVP
The first version of the homepage wasn’t bad (according to me, an engineer). It did the job: headline, description, textbox, and a big “Generate” button. But it looked like a tool built by an engineer (because it was). There were rough edges:
- The input box felt awkward with the “Random Idea” button inside it
- The CTA didn’t look clickable
- The value props were floating and disconnected
Earliest MVP version — gray button, no branding:
I took a screenshot and asked ChatGPT: “Does this feel cluttered? What would you improve for conversions and clarity?”
Step 2: Let ChatGPT Act Like Your Product Designer
ChatGPT broke down what worked and what didn’t. He also broke down and cried, but… that was sad and I don’t want to relive that 45 minutes of my life… so after that, I asked it to act like a conversion-focused landing page consultant. It recommended:
- Move the “Random Idea” button outside the input field
- Add a lead-in like “Describe your business to get name suggestions instantly”
- Improve the contrast and visual priority of the CTA
- Cluster the feature bullets into a horizontal, styled block
I’m pretty sure I planned to add an image here, but you’re going to have to deal with the fact that I didn’t. Please email all the hate to rcavezza@gmail.com please. 🙂
Step 3: Prompt Cursor to Make the Fixes
I compiled ChatGPT’s feedback into a single prompt and dropped it into Cursor’s LLM:
Refactor the homepage layout to improve clarity, visual hierarchy, and usability.
- Move “Random Idea” button below the input
- Add a one-liner helper text above input
- Make Generate button more visually prominent and clickable
- Align left/right content
- Group feature bullets into one clean section
...
Step 4: Keep Iterating in 5-Minute Loops
I repeated this loop a few more times:
- Ask GPT for design critiques
- Copy-paste fixes to Cursor
- Compare screenshots side-by-side
It sooh became a rhythm. I wasn’t overthinking or rebuilding — just tweaking and moving fast.
Final Polish: Making It Feel Like a Real Product
Here’s the wild part: this transformation happened in about 45 minutes. Not 3 days. Not a sprint. Literally under an hour.
In the final version, I added polish:
- A soft warm background to make the page feel inviting
- A short, catchy subtitle (“Instantly name your business and grab the perfect domain — in seconds”)
- Proper alignment and hierarchy
How You Can Do the Same
- Start ugly but usable. Launch a functional version — don’t wait for pretty.
- Ask ChatGPT for critiques like it’s your product designer.
- Use Cursor to instantly apply those fixes in code.
- Take screenshots and compare as you go. You’ll spot things faster visually than in your code.
- Keep the loop fast and fun. Tiny iterations, not full redesigns.
This is how I’m approaching early-stage MVPs now. Launch small, iterate fast, use AI feedback loops. Feels like cheating—but in the best way possible.
More to come as I keep building Naminique and Teemzo. You can follow along or reach out. You should know my email address but on twitter I’m @cavezza and on IG I’m @bobbyinsandiego
Insert horizontal line here because I don’t know how to do it in this weird new WordPress interface…
Bobby