A short breakdown of how I went about moving my personal website from Squarespace to Webflow.
You can see my personal website here.
I had played around with Webflow earlier this year for a landing page and gave up after getting overwhelmed. I switched to Carrd for landing pages because it was easier.
But when it came to my personal website, I couldn't use Carrd because I needed a blog. I wanted to challenge myself so I decided to give Webflow another shot, after hearing so many good things about it. Plus, I just joined Launch MBA and needed a good first project to start with.
A large reason why I picked Webflow was the fact that Webflow itself has a lot of detailed tutorials on YouTube, as well as a lot of other people doing tutorials for it on YouTube. I knew I had resources if I got stuck.
I took a phased approach to re-designing my personal website in Webflow. The first cut of my personal website includes:
Now that the first cut is done, I plan to add the following to my website over time:
It took me about 3 weeks to redesign my website in Webflow, while working on a few other things.
I thought about paying for a nice template but instead, I ended up using their "Portfolio" preset template. I wanted to build out my blog from scratch to learn Webflow and create a lot of my other pages from scratch to challenge myself.
I got a site plan with hosting and paid USD$192 for it for the year. Squarespace w/ hosting was USD$144 per year so paying a little more for Webflow was worth it in my opinion.
I started watching the Webflow 101 Crash Course but didn't end up finishing it. Instead, I watched tutorials based on what I was trying to do. This worked out really well for me. E.g. if I wanted to add a form, I watched a tutorial on forms.
I initially started creating a fancy color-themed website using a deep red color. But as I look at other personal websites for inspiration, I noticed a lot of them were very simple (black & white with very minimal color for some headings or subheadings) - e.g. tr.af, janlosert.com, preetamnath.com. So I decided to make mine very minimalistic too.
I initially wanted to include images of the landing pages of all my projects, but it didn't end up looking really nice because each landing page was very different. Instead, I decided to represent each project with an illustration. I liked the idea of keeping the projects a little bit abstract too:
I wanted to use different fonts for the headings and the body text, but I'm not a designer and have no clue how to combine different fonts. I also read somewhere that using multiple fonts slows down a website so I used that as an excuse just to import a new Google font into Webflow called Krub.
The process to import a new Google font was SO EASY. Literally took 2 minutes using this tutorial.
I used Canva for all my graphics, specifically the SVG format because it makes the image a lot clearer than a .png file. However, note that for Open Graph Settings (includes the share image), you can't use an .svg format, only .png.
The transfer of my custom domain from Squarespace to GoDaddy was quite painless (I followed these instructions). It took about 5 business days for the domain to transfer and there was no way to speed that up with Squarespace.
The hardest part of this whole process was designing the website. Deciding on a minimalist design honestly saved me. Had I incorporated more colors, it would have taken me forever to make everything work. Even without a lot of color, deciding how to align the elements and then making them responsive across all the different device sizes was a lot of work.
That's about it! My new website is now live and I'm super excited to start blogging on it more and building it up over time.
I hope this is helpful for others who are either also moving their website from Squarespace to Webflow, or just generally designing a new website in Webflow.
I'm curious how you moved blog posts. did you find an xml to cms converter? or did you just copy paste each and every individual post? very impressive site btw.
Thanks for the kind words, been working on the site for the past 1.5 years. It's constantly a work in progress. >.<
I copied all blog posts manually -- I only had 2-3 blog posts at the time so it was super easy. Most of my content on my site I wrote after I switched to Webflow (felt more motivated and just started writing more in general.)
I've used Webflow a TON since 2014. Their growth is astounding, both in terms of user + revenue growth and product growth.
They're constantly adding amazing features and I'm super excited for the future of Webflow.
The learning curve can be a bit intense for some people but I see Webflow as a professional tool (e.g. Figma / Sketch / Photoshop). I'm a UX/UI designer so I put in the time to learn the ins and outs and now 95% of my work is delivered via Webflow.
I even built the whole www.usebolt.io design (including backend) on Webflow - exported the dashboard bits and I keep the marketing pages hosted on Webflow so that I can jump in and make tiny tweaks at any time.
Moving your personal website to Webflow is a smart move - congrats! As a side-note, I very much enjoyed your write-up on Cosell, fascinating!
Thanks so much for the response! I agree Webflow is a professional tool but still quite easy to use in the grand scheme of things.
It's interesting to me that even designers and developers these days are switching to Webflow. When I hear people building websites from scratch with code, I just can't help but feel they are reinventing the wheel and that time could be used for something else.
I'm glad you enjoyed my write-up on Cosell, it was a crucial experience for me as an entrepreneur and I put a lot of effort into the write-up. :)
Love the website!
Thanks Deepika!
Fantastic work Lena!
Thank you! :)