From blueprint to finished site
What the Business Discovery Blueprint is, why approving it matters, and what happens while your site generates.
Updated 2026-07-16
Before CurateOne generates a full site, it shows you a Business Discovery Blueprint — a short, approvable contract describing the site it intends to build. This is your chance to steer the result before any heavy lifting happens.
02What’s in the blueprint
- Brand colors and typography
- Layout and animation style
- Conversion type — what the site is trying to get visitors to do
- Recommended pages and features (the sitemap)
- Geographic and B2B signals detected from your brief
03Approval binds generation
The blueprint isn’t a suggestion box — approved fields bind the generation. If you approve specific colors, those are the colors. Most importantly, the approved sitemap decides the final pages: approve two or more pages and you get a real multi-page site with that exact structure.
04Generation runs in the background
Once you approve, generation runs as a background job with staged progress, so you can see what phase it’s in. The job belongs to your account, not your browser tab — refresh the page and it re-attaches to the same job. If a generation fails, the credit it used is refunded automatically.
05Design DNA keeps sites distinctive
Your site’s palette, fonts, layout archetype, and motion are drawn deterministically from a brand seed before any AI call — the AI writes copy into a design that already exists. A sameness guard re-rolls designs that collide with other sites, so your result is yours.