Portfolio website template

A portfolio that shows the work and the result.

Seven sections and two copyable prompts for creators, consultants, and agencies. Position yourself, show selected work, and make it easy to get in touch.

Selected work

These entries are illustrative examples. Replace them with your own projects, and only name a client when you have their permission.

Sample project

Brand refresh for a fictional studio

Illustrative example: clarified the positioning, then redesigned the homepage around a single offer.

Sample project

Marketing site for an example product

Illustrative example: structured the site around problem, solution, and proof to lift enquiries.

Sample project

Landing page for a sample campaign

Illustrative example: focused one page on a single call to action and measured the result.

Services

  • A service you offer, described by the outcome a client gets.
  • A second service, with the kind of project it suits.
  • A third service, with how you typically work together.

About

A short, honest paragraph about your background and how you work. Visitors hire people they trust, so write it the way you would explain your work to a new client.

Process

Discovery

Understand the goal, audience, and constraints.

Direction

Agree the approach and what success looks like.

Delivery

Produce the work and review together.

Handover

Ship it and make sure it is easy to maintain.

Contact form

Keep it simple: name, email, and a short project details field. Boomlink captures the submissions so you can reply to new enquiries.

Read the forms guide

Copy the prompts

Use the first prompt to create the portfolio, then the second to revise the work and project sections. Paste into ChatGPT or Claude with Boomlink connected.

Create the portfolio

Build a portfolio website for me with Boomlink.

Structure it as: positioning hero, selected work, services, about, process, contact form, and FAQ.

Details to use:
- My role and who I help: [for example "brand designer for early-stage startups"]
- Three to six work examples, each with a problem, what I did, and the outcome: [list them]
- Services I offer: [list]
- A short about section: [background and how I work]
- My process in three or four steps: [list]
- Contact form fields: name, email, project details

Keep work examples generic and clearly illustrative unless I give you real, approved client names. Do not invent client names or outcomes.

Revise the work

Revise my Boomlink portfolio.

- Rewrite the selected work entries so each one reads as problem, action, and result.
- Make the positioning hero state exactly who I help and the result I deliver.
- Keep every example generic and illustrative unless I provide a real, approved client.

Portfolio website FAQ

What sections does a portfolio website need?

A strong portfolio uses a positioning hero, selected work, services, about, process, a contact form, and a short FAQ. The hero states who you help, selected work shows proof, services explain what you offer, and the contact form turns interest into a conversation.

Can I use placeholder work if I am just starting?

Yes. Keep early examples generic and clearly illustrative, such as a sample project framed as "the kind of work I do". Do not present invented client names or fabricated outcomes as real engagements.

How should I describe each project?

Use a problem, action, result structure. State the problem the client faced, what you did, and the outcome. This reads better than a list of deliverables and helps a visitor imagine working with you.

Where do contact submissions go?

Boomlink captures form submissions for your published site so you can reply to new project enquiries.

Read the forms guide