For content creators

AI website builder for content creators owning their audience

Newsletter writers, podcasters, YouTubers, Twitter / X creators — generate a personal hub that owns your audience instead of leaving it on platforms.

The short version

Content creators face a structural problem: every platform you publish on owns the relationship with your audience. Algorithm changes, account suspensions, platform consolidation — any of these can erase the audience you spent years building. The only audience metric that survives platform churn is your email list, and the only artifact that ranks on Google for your name is your own site.

Website Killer generates the creator hub from a prompt: hero with your work and your concept, featured content (essays, episodes, videos), newsletter signup, links to your platforms, contact for press / brand deals. Person + Article schema is wired automatically.

What changes after launch: compounding. Every essay you write, every podcast episode you ship, every video you publish lives on a permanent URL the search engines and LLMs index. Three years in, your site outranks every social platform for your name and for the topics you cover — and the email list you've built from that compounding is yours forever.

The job to be done

I'm building an audience on platforms I don't own. I need a home base — a personal hub where the email list lives, where my work compounds, where I rank for my name.

Why other AI builders fall short for this job

  • Substack / Beehiiv handle the newsletter — they don't handle the hub
  • Twitter / X bio is one link; you need a real site
  • Linktree is a one-page hack; serious creators look like serious creators on a real site
  • Squarespace looks templated and SEO is mediocre
  • WordPress means hosting + plugins + security patches you don't want

What Website Killer ships for content creators

  • Personal hub site in 30 minutes from a prompt
  • Featured content section pulling your top 4–8 essays / episodes / videos
  • Newsletter signup wired to ConvertKit / Beehiiv / Substack / Loops
  • Person + Article schema for entity SEO
  • Custom domain matching your name (yourname.com)
  • Press / brand-deal contact form
  • Source-code export when you graduate to a custom build

Where this fits

Real-world scenarios

Newsletter writer hub

You write a weekly newsletter on Substack with 5K subscribers. The Substack URL is yourname.substack.com — a platform domain. Generate a hub at yourname.com, embed the Substack signup, surface your top essays, link out to social. The newsletter compounds; the platform doesn't own your name anymore.

Podcaster + writer hybrid

You run a podcast (Spotify + Apple) and write essays. The podcast site is one tool, the essays live on Medium, your bio is on Twitter. Consolidate into one hub: episodes + essays + about + newsletter + contact. One URL ranks for your name; everything else points at it.

YouTube creator landing for sponsors

Your YouTube channel has 80K subscribers. Sponsors want to evaluate you before pitching deals. Generate a brand-deal landing with audience demographics (anonymized), past partnerships, contact form. Sponsors who land here convert 3x better than 'message me on Twitter.'

Indie creator going full-time

You're transitioning from a day job to full-time creator (newsletter + courses + consulting). The site needs to convert all three revenue streams: free newsletter signup, paid course signup, consulting inquiry. Three CTAs, one hub.

Worked examples

Prompts that work

Three prompts you can adapt for your work. The more concrete the prompt, the less editing afterward.

Writer hub

Site for [name], a writer who covers tech and labor. 4K essays on Substack, 80 essays published in major outlets (Atlantic, Wired, NYMag). Hero: 'I write about technology, labor, and the people in between.' Featured essays: 6 with title + outlet + brief description. Newsletter: 'After Work' via Beehiiv. About: bio, where I live (Berlin). Contact: email + Twitter. Style: editorial magazine, type-driven, neutral.

Why this works · Writer hub prompts should name outlets + Beehiiv/Substack. The AI uses them for credibility (named outlets) and integration (newsletter signup).

Podcaster hub

Site for The Stack, a weekly podcast by [name] interviewing engineers, founders, and product leaders. 80 episodes, 30K downloads/month. Hero: 'Conversations with people who build software for a living.' Episode grid (paginated). Subscribe panel: Spotify, Apple, Overcast, YouTube. Newsletter: 'Stack Weekly' via ConvertKit. About host. Style: editorial, restrained.

Why this works · Podcaster prompts should name episode count + downloads. The AI uses them for credibility and routes subscribe CTAs to every major player.

Multi-platform creator hub

Site for [name], a creator with a YouTube channel (180K subs), a newsletter on Beehiiv (12K subs), and a Twitter following (45K). Hero: '[Name] — videos and essays on [topic].' Three featured surfaces: latest YouTube videos (5), latest essays (5), social links. Newsletter signup as the primary conversion. Style: warm, photography-led, content-first.

Why this works · Multi-platform creators need a single hub. The prompt asks for three featured surfaces so each platform gets a place on the home.

Internal links

Related industries

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

Can I integrate ConvertKit, Beehiiv, Substack, or Loops for newsletter signup?

Yes — paste your newsletter tool's embed URL or form URL and the AI wires the signup. Submissions also post to your project inbox as a backup. Most creators route directly to their newsletter tool so the welcome sequence fires automatically.

Can I import my existing essays / episodes / videos?

Two patterns. (A) Mirror — describe your top content in the prompt and the AI generates cards linking out to wherever it lives (Substack, YouTube, Spotify). (B) Move — paste essay content into the chat composer and the AI generates each piece as its own page with Article schema. Most creators use mirror at first and move later.

Will the site rank for my name on Google?

Yes — Person schema + custom domain matching your name = #1 for your name inside 4–8 weeks for uncommon names, 8–12 weeks for common ones. Combined with your platform profiles linking back to yourname.com, the site outranks every social profile within 3 months.

Can I run a brand-deals page separate from the main hub?

Yes — ask for '/sponsorships or /brand-deals page' in your prompt. The page surfaces audience demographics (anonymized), past partnerships, and a deal-inquiry form. Sponsors landing here convert 3–5x better than the generic 'contact me' page.

How does this work with a Substack / Beehiiv newsletter?

The hub site and the newsletter platform play different roles. The hub ranks on Google for your name + topics, captures email signups, surfaces your work. The newsletter platform publishes the actual newsletter. Most successful creators run both — yourname.com as the hub, yournewsletter.beehiiv.com or yourname.substack.com as the newsletter.

Can I add a /sponsor or /brand-deals page for advertiser inquiries?

Yes — describe the page in your prompt with audience size, demographics, past partnerships, and a deal-inquiry form. The AI generates the page with conversion-tuned structure (audience-numbers above the fold, past deals as social proof, simple form below).

Ship a site this afternoon — content creators edition.

Free forever plan. Custom domains, hosting, and AI generation included.