How I built my Framer template empire

It started as a weekend experiment - a single landing page template I built for fun. Now, it’s a growing collection of design tools powering thousands of creators, startups, and indie makers. This is the story of how I turned a Framer obsession into a thriving digital product business.

design

I wasn’t planning to start an “empire.” I just wanted a clean, fast, and flexible site for a side project - and Framer felt like the perfect canvas. I loved its speed, the live editing experience, and the way it merged code and creativity. So I built something small and launched it on a whim.

That first template? It sold five copies in the first 48 hours. Nothing wild, but enough to make me pay attention.

Step 1: Obsess over Design, Not Just Sales

I knew if I wanted to stand out in a growing market of templates, mine had to feel different. I focused on clean layouts, smooth animations, and genuinely useful UX patterns—not just pretty shells. I treated each one like a real product, not a throwaway asset.

Every template had a story: who it was for, what problem it solved, and how it could be adapted. I didn’t just sell pages—I sold possibilities.

Step 2: Build in Public

I started sharing my process online. Early sketches, prototypes, feedback polls, and breakdowns of how I was structuring animations or accessibility. This built trust and pulled in a curious audience—other designers, indie hackers, even startups looking for no-code speed.

People don’t just want products. They want to follow builders.

Step 3: Create a Buying Experience

Templates are digital goods - but I treated the experience like premium software. I built custom demo pages, clean documentation, setup walkthroughs, and even “use cases” showing how to adapt the same template for different industries. I wanted people to feel confident, supported, and creatively inspired the moment they downloaded.

I also offered license flexibility - single, team, and unlimited options—which brought in agencies and freelancers working with multiple clients.

Step 4: Stack Value, Not Just Templates

Instead of pushing volume, I built depth. Every time I released something new, I updated existing templates too—improving performance, adding dark mode, refining interactions. This gave buyers a sense that the templates were alive, not static.

Eventually, I bundled them into curated collections: portfolios, landing pages, startup kits, blog-first sites. That’s when sales really took off.

Step 5: Automate, But Stay Human

Now that there’s consistent MRR, I’ve automated a lot—delivery emails, license handling, updates. But I still reply to support questions myself, and send personal thank-you notes when someone tags me in their finished build. People remember that.

Where It’s At Now:

  • 15+ live templates

  • 2,500+ users

  • $8K+ MRR and growing

  • Featured multiple times by Framer

  • A waiting list for custom template commissions

I didn’t build this overnight. And I didn’t go viral. What I did do was show up daily, keep iterating, and obsess over quality. If you're thinking of launching your own Framer templates - or any kind of digital product - just remember: consistency outlasts hype.

What starts as a side hustle can turn into a system. And that system? It can scale.

hiker in nature

Subscribe to my Newsletter

Sign up to stay updated about my latest work and adventures. No Spam, No BS. Promise!

hiker in nature

Subscribe to my Newsletter

Sign up to stay updated about my latest work and adventures. No Spam, No BS. Promise!