From Wix to Figma: How We Rebuilt Our Website with AI and a Headless CMS
Author
Claudio
Date Published

Our new website is live, but calling it a "redesign" misses the point. We didn't just change the paint; we demolished the building and its faulty foundations. This is the story of why we broke away from the old rules of web platforms and content marketing to build a stage we truly own.
Act I: The Game Was Rigged
For a long time, we played by the standard playbook. But we realized we were playing a game we could no longer win. Two forces were working against us:
- The Golden Cage of Managed Platforms - We started on Wix, and it served its purpose, until it didn't. As our vision grew, the platform became a cage. Simple creative ideas turned into technical battles against the platform's limitations. We found ourselves writing custom code just to force a rented system to do what we wanted. That’s when it hit us: why were we fighting so hard to work around someone else's rules?
- The Great Content Heist - We were winning the old content game. Our deeply researched technical articles, like Miguel Neves’s work on Mixture of Experts, drew tens of thousands of daily visitors and dominated Google search results. But then the game changed.

First, competitors used LLMs to scrape our hard-won insights, polish them slightly, and outrank us with our own work. Then, ChatGPT indexed our knowledge so perfectly that users got their answers from the chatbot, cutting us out of the conversation entirely. Our expertise was being harvested, and the ROI on giving it away for free vanished overnight.

The verdict was clear: a rented platform and a free content model were no longer assets. They were liabilities.
Act II: Building a Strategic Tool
We decided to build our own stage, using our own tools. This wasn't about ego; it was about strategy.
- It Started with a Smart Foundation, Not a Blank Slate We didn't reinvent the wheel by coding everything from scratch. An architect doesn't fire their own bricks. We chose a powerful headless CMS, Payload, as our bedrock. This gave us a solid foundation, and we focused our engineering firepower where it mattered: building the unique features that didn't exist and customizing components to serve our precise message.
- Our Unfair Advantage: The In-House AI Native Someone might ask, "Wouldn't it be cheaper to just hire a Wix person?" This question misses the iceberg of hidden costs. The true expense isn't salary; it's the constant tax on management time—the endless cycle of onboarding an outsider, explaining our brand, and correcting misinterpretations.
The hard truth is that context management is not just an LLM game. Our in-house full-stack engineer doesn't just understand the code; they understand our mission. They have the context. There's no translation layer. And when that engineer is also an expert at wielding tools like Claude and Gemini, they become a massive force multiplier. The cost of hiring and the drain on a CEO's time are footnotes compared to the strategic velocity you gain from having the right person, in-house, with the right tools.
Act III: From Hidden Liability to Brand Asset
As CEO, I saw the old site for what it was: a source of constant friction that actively damaged our brand. When top talent tells you your website "looks like a joke," you're not saving money on a cheaper platform; you're paying a massive, invisible price in lost opportunities.
This new site is the antidote. It's a direct reflection of our capabilities—an investment that has already begun to pay for itself in positive feedback and renewed confidence from clients and partners.
At TensorOps, the cobbler's children are not going barefoot. We are using the very technology we champion to forge our own path. We don't just sell this future; we're building our own business on it.