Page Builder
A page builder is a visual tool that lets users assemble and edit web pages from modular content blocks, without manually writing the underlying markup.
In depth
A page builder works on the principle of composition: instead of coding a page top to bottom, you stack reusable sections—text, media, forms, and interactive elements—and adjust their settings through a panel rather than a code file. This component-based model means design decisions become configuration, so a page is fast to change, easy to duplicate, and consistent across a site. The most capable page builders also separate content from styling, letting a brand apply a global theme so every page inherits typography, color, and spacing automatically.
Where a page builder fits a lead-qualification funnel is broader than a single landing page: it can produce the entire surface a prospect touches—landing page, quiz pages, and a result page—using one shared component library so the experience feels cohesive end to end. A common pitfall is treating the builder as unlimited freedom and creating dozens of bespoke section variants, which fragments the design system and slows future edits. Mature teams constrain themselves to a curated block set and lean on theming to keep visual debt low.
Example in practice
Frequently asked questions
Is a page builder the same as a landing page builder?
They overlap but differ in scope: a page builder can construct many page types across a site, while a landing page builder specializes in single-goal conversion pages with built-in forms and analytics. A landing page builder is essentially a focused page builder.
Will a page builder slow down my website?
It can if it outputs bloated code or loads many heavy plugins, but modern builders are optimized for clean, fast output. Sticking to native blocks and limiting custom scripts keeps page-load performance strong.
Can multiple team members use a page builder at once?
Most professional page builders support multiple users with roles and permissions, so marketers, designers, and copywriters can collaborate. Many also offer version history and locking to prevent two people overwriting each other's edits.