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New Google Stitch update is insane. You can now take any website screenshot and turn it into a brand new design plus working code in like 20 seconds. I'm talking upload a picture, type what you want, and boom, you get a full redesigned website with HTML and CS ready to go. This is the new Google Stitch update, and it's absolutely nuts. Let me show you exactly how this works and why everyone's freaking out about it. So, what is Google Stitch? It's this AI tool from Google Labs that takes your ideas or pictures and turns them into actual websites. You can type what you want in plain English. You can upload sketches. You can even upload screenshots of existing websites and Stitch builds you a real UI with code you can actually use. But here's where it gets wild. Hey, if we haven't met already, I'm the digital avatar of Julian Goldie, CEO of SEO agency Goldie Agency. Whilst he's helping clients get more leads and customers, I'm here to help you get the latest AI updates. Julian Goldie reads every comment, so make sure you comment below. The new update just changed everything. They added something called a redesign agent, and it's powered by this new model called Nano Banana Pro from Gemini 3 Pro. What this means is you can take any existing website, upload a screenshot, or even just paste the URL and tell Stitch to redesign it however you want. modern look, minimal style, dark mode, Gen Z vibes, whatever you need. And it does it in seconds. Here's the actual workflow. You grab a screenshot of any website. Could be your own site, could be a competitor's site, could be some old looking website you found online. You upload it to Stitch. Then you write a simple prompt like make this modern and clean with better spacing and a blue color scheme. The AI analyzes the entire structure, the buttons, the navigation bar, the layout, the spacing, everything. Then it regenerates the whole thing as a brand new design. And this isn't just making it look pretty. The redesign agent actually understands how websites work. It's not creating a flat image. It's building real components, real buttons, real navigation, real layout structures. So when you export the code, you get actual HTML and CSS that works, not some mess you have to fix for hours. But wait, there's more. After you redesign something, you can export it directly to Google AI Studio with everything intact, all the assets, all the HTML and CSS, all the screen context, no copy pasting, no manual work. It just moves over, ready to build into a working app or website. This is huge because it means you go from screenshot to redesigned UI to deployable code without touching anything manually. Let me give you a real example of how this works. Say you have an old landing page that looks like it's from 2015. You know the type, tiny fonts, cluttered layout, colors that hurt your eyes. You take a screenshot of it, upload it to Stitch, then you write a simple prompt. Redesign for a modern SAS landing page. Dark mode, minimal design, big hero section with a clear call to action button, clean typography. You hit enter. 20 seconds later, you have a completely new design. The AI took your old crusty website and turned it into something that looks like it was built this year. Clean dark background, big bold hero text, clear call to action button that actually stands out. proper spacing that makes everything easy to read. Then you click export to AI Studio. Now you have the full HTML NCS sitting right there ready to use. You can preview it in a browser right away. Check how it looks on mobile. desktop. Everything works. And if you want to tweak it more, you just write another prompt. Maybe you decide you want to try a light mode version instead. Or you want to change the blue accent to orange. Or you want bigger space in between sections. You can keep generating variants and trying different styles until it's exactly what you want. No designer needed, no developer needed, just you and the AI. And if you're serious about staying ahead with AI tools like this, join my AI profit boardroom. This is where I share every new AI tool and automation strategy that can help you scale your business and get more customers. You'll learn how to use tools like Google Stitch to redesign your website, build landing pages faster, create prototypes without hiring designers, and automate so much of your workflow. The link is in the description. Here's another way to use this. Let's say you're building a new app, but you're not a designer. You don't know Figma. You don't know Sketch. You barely know what good design looks like, but you have an idea in your head. So, you draw a rough wireframe on paper, just boxes and lines and labels, or you sketch it on a whiteboard during a meeting. Doesn't have to be pretty, just has to show the basic layout. You take a photo with your phone, upload it to Stitch, then you write a prompt that describes what you want. Create a mobile dashboard UI with a card-based layout, bottom navigation bar, clean spacing, and a pastel color theme. You're basically telling the AI what style to apply to your rough sketch. The AI looks at your drawing. It sees where you put the cards. drew the bottom nav. It understands the structure you want. Then Stitch turns your rough sketch into a polished UI design with working code. Suddenly, your messy wireframe is a beautiful mobile interface with proper colors, proper spacing, proper typography, and proper layout. The cards look professional. The
bottom nav has nice icons. Everything is aligned and spaced correctly. Now you have something you can actually build with or show to potential clients or use as your MVP to test with real users. You went from napkin sketch to working prototype in minutes. So, who is this tool actually for? Product owners who need to build MVPs fast. Startups that don't have big budgets for designers. Designers who want to prototype ideas quickly without coding. Developers who need rapid mock-ups before building the real thing. Agencies that need to show clients design concepts fast. Basically, anyone who needs to go from idea to working UI without spending days or weeks on it. The best use cases right now are landing pages, internal dashboards, admin panels, MVPs, and UI redesigns. This isn't meant for super complex full scale apps with tons of interactive features yet. is focused on the UI layer, the front end, the visual stuff. If you need heavy backend logic or complex state management, you'll still need to build that separately. But for getting the design and basic structure done fast, this is a gamecher. Let me tell you why people are calling this insane. The old way of doing this took forever. You'd have to sketch ideas, then design in Figma or Sketch, then hand off designs to a developer, then the developer writes all the HTML and CSS. Then you realize something doesn't look right. So you go back to the designer, make changes, hand it off again, repeat the cycle like five times. Days or weeks later, you finally have something live. With this new Stitch update, that whole process takes minutes. You upload what you have, tell the AI what you want, get a design with code, export it, done. You just collapsed weeks of work into one sitting. That's why developers and designers are freaking out about this. It removes so much friction between the design phase and the development phase. But let's talk about the limitations because nothing is perfect. First, Stitch is still experimental. It's in Google Labs, which means it's not fully stable yet. Some users are reporting bugs like losing generated screens after a redesign. So, you might need to regenerate things or work around glitches. Second, the quality depends on your input. If you upload a messy wireframe or a super low resolution screenshot or something with a confusing layout, the AI might get confused. Garbage in, garbage out. The cleaner your input, the better your output. Third, the code it generates is front end only. You get HTML and CSS, maybe some basic JavaScript, but you don't get backend logic. You don't get database connections. You don't get authentication systems. You don't get complex interactions. So, if you're building anything beyond a static site or simple prototype, you'll need to add that stuff yourself or use another tool. Fourth, prompt clarity matters. If you write vague instructions like make it look cool, you're going to get random results. But if you're specific like use a dark blue background, white text, large hero image, three feature cards below with icons. Bottom call to action button in bright orange, the AI knows exactly what to do. Be clear and you'll get better results. For designers, developers, and entrepreneurs, this means faster prototyping, cheaper experimentation, lower barrier to building products. You don't need to be a coding expert anymore to turn your ideas into real working interfaces. That's huge for people who have great ideas but don't have technical skills. It democratizes web and app development. So, should you try this? Absolutely. If you're building anything with a UI, this tool can save you massive amounts of time. Go to Google Labs, find Stitch, and start playing with it. Upload screenshots, try different prompts, see what it can do. The more you experiment, the better you'll understand how to get the results you want. And if you're serious about staying ahead with AI tools like this, join my AI profit boardroom. This is where I share every new AI tool and automation strategy that can help you scale your business and get more customers. You'll learn how to use tools like Google Stitch to redesign your website, build landing pages faster, create prototypes without hiring designers, and automate so much of your workflow. The link is in the description. I'll see you inside. That's it for today. Hit the like and subscribe button and I will see you in the next