Google Stitch Prompt - Blip Landing Page

Date: 22 March 2026 Purpose: Generate 5-6 layout variations for comparison


The prompt

Copy everything below this line and paste into Google Stitch:


Design a single-page landing website for “Blip” — a boutique, premium personal tech support service. The founder has 25+ years of experience. The service is high-touch and human: no bots, no call centres, no tickets. Just one person you know and trust who handles your tech.

The target audience is busy professionals and solopreneurs aged 40-60+, many of whom are women. They are not technical. They are frustrated, sometimes anxious, sometimes embarrassed about their relationship with technology. They want relief, safety, and confidence — not to become technical themselves. They are affluent and expect a premium experience.

Brand personality: warm, approachable, quietly confident, modern. Think Apple’s design simplicity applied to a personal service. Not corporate. Not techy. Not feminine. Gender-neutral warmth.

Colour palette: dark navy (#0A2341) as the primary, warm amber/gold (#D4A843) for accents, a bright blue (#3B82F6) for CTA buttons, light blue-grey (#F0F4F8) for section backgrounds, white for text on dark backgrounds, near-black for body text on light backgrounds.

Logo: the word “blip” in lowercase white rounded sans-serif on a navy circle. Clean, friendly, modern.

Typography: generous sizing, highly readable. Sans-serif throughout. Large headlines. Comfortable body text. Nothing small or dense. Generous line spacing. This audience needs effortless readability.

Design principles: Apple-inspired minimalism. Generous white space. One message per section. Rounded UI elements (buttons, cards). No clutter. Sparse — people don’t want to read a lot. Every section should breathe. Subtle hover animations only. No parallax scrolling. No stock photography grids. No pricing tables. No chat widgets.

Page structure — keep it loose, surprise me with creative layouts, but include these elements somewhere:

HERO: Full-width background video area (dark, warm tones) with text overlaid on the left side using a navy gradient wash. The headline changes periodically (rotating text). One primary CTA button: “Book a free call.” The video area should feel immersive but not overwhelming.

PROBLEM RECOGNITION: A short section (2-3 sentences maximum) that makes the visitor feel seen. Something that acknowledges tech frustration without being heavy. This section should feel like a quiet moment of empathy.

THREE SERVICES: Tech Support, Online Safety, AI Coaching. Presented as three clean cards or blocks with icons, a short name, and one sentence each. Not feature lists. Not detailed. Just enough to signal “we do these three things.”

WHAT MAKES US DIFFERENT: The personal relationship angle. No call centres. You know us, we know you. 25 years of trust. This could be a single powerful statement with supporting detail, or a visual treatment that conveys intimacy and trust.

SOCIAL PROOF: Short client testimonials. Real names. Ideally with a subtle treatment (pull quotes, small cards) rather than a carousel. These should feel authentic and understated.

ABOUT THE FOUNDER: A warm, personal section with a circular headshot photo. Brief text — the “I’m a nerd but I’m a nice nerd” angle. Human, approachable, experienced.

CALL TO ACTION: A closing section that repeats the primary CTA — book a free call. Warm, inviting, low-pressure. “Let’s have a conversation and see if we’re a good fit.”

Navigation: minimal. The logo on the left. Maybe 3-4 text links on the right (like “What we do”, “About”, “Contact”). A “Book a call” button in the nav that’s always visible.

Generate 5-6 distinctly different layout variations. Each should have the same content and colour palette but explore different arrangements, visual hierarchies, spacing, and personality. Some tighter, some more expansive. Some with the services near the top, some further down. Some with large hero areas, some more compact. I want to compare different vibes and spatial rhythms to find the right feel.

Do NOT include any stock photography or placeholder people images. Use solid colour blocks, subtle gradients, or abstract shapes where imagery would go. The photography direction has not been finalised yet.

Match Material Design 3 guidelines for component styling where appropriate.