Where Framer earns the work
- Boutique D2C launches where the brand identity is the product and time-to-market matters.
- Pre-seed + seed startups who need a real-feeling site fast without engineering capacity.
- Conference + product launch microsites with a defined runway and serious motion needs.
- Design-led portfolios for studios, photographers, illustrators — Framer’s CMS is enough.
Where Framer hits its ceiling
Beyond ~30 CMS entries with complex relationships, multilingual sites with serious editorial workflows, anything that needs a real backend, or eCommerce. Framer is opinionated by design — that’s its strength on small projects and its limit on big ones. I’ll be honest about which side you’re on.
The Framer stack I actually use
Native: Framer’s CMS, Components, Variables, Effects. Code Components: for the moments where Framer’s no-code primitives aren’t enough — bespoke animations, third-party SDK integrations, custom carousels. Forms: Framer’s native form + Make / Zapier for routing, or Formspark for direct submit. Bookings: Cal.com embed. Hosting: Framer’s CDN.
Common questions
Can a Framer site really launch in 11 days?
Yes if the brand is decided and the copy is mostly written. Where it slips is when discovery + design happen in parallel with build — same as any platform. With a clear brief, 11 days is realistic for a 5–7 page marketing site.
Framer or Webflow?
Framer when the team’s small, motion is the brief, and the site won’t grow much past 20 pages. Webflow when there’s a marketing team, the CMS is structurally important, or you need granular SEO control. Both are excellent — choice is about who’ll maintain it.
Will it rank?
Yes for branded queries, marketing pages, and small-content sites. For SEO-heavy publishing, Framer’s not the right tool — that’s a WordPress or headless build. I’ll tell you which during scoping.