April 6, 2026
From Brief to Presentation in Minutes
You just got off a call with a new client. They described what they want. A landing page for their SaaS product, or a dashboard for their internal tool, or a mobile app for their restaurant. Now you need to show them something. Not next week. Today. Here is how dMaya makes that possible.
The Old Way (and Why It Is Slow)
Traditionally, turning a brief into a presentable design concept takes days. Sometimes weeks. You start by interpreting the brief, researching competitor sites, picking a visual direction. Then you open Figma and start dragging rectangles around. You build one page, maybe two, tweak the typography, adjust the spacing, export it, and send it over.
The client looks at it and says "this is not quite what I had in mind." So you go back and do it again. Each round takes another day or two. By the time everyone agrees on the direction, you have spent a week on something that has not generated a single line of production code.
This is not a bad process. It works. But it is slow, and speed matters when you are trying to win clients or keep projects on schedule.
The dMaya Way (Step by Step)
Let us walk through the same scenario using dMaya. Same client, same brief, completely different timeline.
Step 1: Paste the Brief
Open a new project in dMaya. Type or paste the client brief into the chat. Something like: "Landing page for a B2B SaaS product. Project management tool for construction companies. Professional, clean, blue and white palette. Hero section with headline and demo CTA. Features grid. Pricing table. Footer with social links."
You do not need a perfectly structured prompt. Write it the way you would describe it to a designer on your team.
Step 2: Generate the First Design
Hit enter and dMaya generates a complete, polished landing page on your canvas. Real typography, proper spacing, a sensible color palette, and actual layout structure. Not a wireframe. Not a low-fi sketch. A design that looks like someone spent hours on it. This step takes seconds.
Step 3: Iterate Through Conversation
Now you refine it. "Make the hero section taller with a background gradient." "Switch to a dark theme." "Add a mobile version of the hero." "Make the pricing table three columns instead of two." Each instruction updates the design instantly on the canvas.
This is the part that saves the most time. Instead of manually adjusting every element in a traditional design tool, you describe what you want changed and it happens. Five rounds of iteration that would take a full day in Figma take ten minutes here.
Step 4: Add More Screens
A landing page is a good start, but clients want to see more. Generate an inner page. "Create a features detail page that matches the landing page style." Add a mobile viewport. "Show me the landing page at 375px width." Generate a dashboard concept. "Design the main dashboard these users would see after logging in."
dMaya uses the design system from your first screen, so every new page stays consistent. Same colors, same typography, same component style. Your presentation feels like a cohesive product, not a collection of unrelated AI outputs.
Step 5: Share a Preview Link
When you are happy with the designs, generate a preview link and send it to your client. They open it in their browser and see every screen at full fidelity. No account needed. They can leave comments directly on the design: "Love this section," "Can we try green instead of blue here," "The footer needs our address."
Total time from brief to a shareable, multi-screen presentation? Minutes. Not days. Not weeks. Minutes.
Real Scenarios
"Client wants a SaaS dashboard concept by tomorrow." Open dMaya, paste the requirements, generate three layout variations, iterate on the best one, share a preview link before lunch. The client thinks you worked all night. You spent 20 minutes.
"Need three landing page directions for a pitch." Generate three different visual approaches from the same brief. Dark and minimal, bright and playful, corporate and clean. Share all three as separate preview links. Let the client pick their favorite, then iterate on that one.
"Mobile app screens for an investor deck." Generate a set of mobile screens: onboarding flow, main feed, profile page, settings. Export them as images for the slide deck, or share a preview link so investors can scroll through the whole flow on their phones.
What Makes This Possible
A few things have to work together for this speed to be real. First, the AI needs to generate production-quality designs, not wireframes that still need hours of polish. dMaya uses multiple AI models (including Gemini and Claude) to produce designs that are genuinely presentation-ready from the first generation.
Second, iteration needs to be conversational. You should not need to re-describe the entire design every time you want a small change. dMaya keeps the context of your project and applies incremental changes. Say "make the hero bigger" and it updates just the hero, leaving everything else intact.
Third, sharing needs to be instant and frictionless. Preview links that work without client accounts are essential. If your client has to create a login just to see the design, you have already lost the speed advantage.
And finally, the designs need to be useful after approval. dMaya exports clean HTML, CSS, and Tailwind code. Your dev team or coding agents can take that output and start building immediately. The AI prototype generator and mockup generator are built for this exact handoff.
The Takeaway
The bottleneck in most design workflows is not the quality of the work. It is the time between "here is the brief" and "here is what it could look like." dMaya collapses that gap from days to minutes.
If you run an agency or work with clients, this changes how fast you can move. Read our guide on presenting AI designs to clients to learn how to position these presentations effectively. And if you are new to AI design, start with our introduction to vibe design to understand the bigger picture.
Turn your next brief into a presentation today
Paste the brief, generate the design, share the link. It really is that fast.
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