Quick Start
This quick start guide shows the basic workflow for creating your first page in Atomicat.
The goal is simple: create a page, edit it in the builder, preview it, publish it, and test that everything works.
Before you begin​
Make sure you have:
- Access to your Atomicat account
- A clear goal for the page
- Basic copy, images, or offer details you want to use
- A site or domain ready if you want to publish the page publicly
You can still create and edit pages before connecting a custom domain.
Step 1: Open the Pages area​
From the Atomicat dashboard, open the Pages area.
This is where you create, manage, search, duplicate, organize, and open pages in the builder.
Step 2: Create a new page​
Create a new page using one of these options:
- Start from a blank page
- Start from a template
- Clone an existing page if you already have one
For your first page, using a template is usually faster because the structure is already prepared.
Step 3: Name your page clearly​
Use a name that helps you identify the page later.
Good examples:
Main Sales Page - Product NameLead Capture - WebinarQuiz Page - Skin Care OfferThank You Page - Campaign Name
Avoid vague names like Test, New Page, or Page 1 when working on real campaigns.
Step 4: Open the page builder​
Open the page in the builder to edit the design and content.
Inside the builder, you can work with:
- Sections and containers
- Text and headings
- Images and videos
- Buttons and links
- Forms and lead capture fields
- Product elements
- Page settings
- SEO and social preview settings
- Tracking pixels and custom scripts
Step 5: Edit the main content​
Start with the most important parts of the page:
- Update the main headline.
- Add a clear subheadline.
- Replace placeholder images.
- Update button text and links.
- Add form fields if the page collects leads.
- Remove sections you do not need.
- Preview the page on mobile.
Keep the first version simple. You can improve the design after the page is working.
Step 6: Configure page settings​
Before publishing, review the page settings.
Important settings include:
- Page title
- SEO description
- Favicon
- Social preview image
- Language
- Custom code if needed
- Pixel and tracking settings
- Page speed or optimization settings when available
These details help search engines, social networks, ad platforms, and visitors understand the page correctly.
Step 7: Preview the page​
Always preview your page before publishing.
Check:
- Desktop layout
- Mobile layout
- Button links
- Form submission
- Images and videos
- Spacing between sections
- Text readability
- Tracking and pixel events if configured
Mobile preview is especially important because many visitors come from phones.
Step 8: Publish the page​
When the page is ready, publish it to a site and URL.
You may need to choose:
- Site
- Domain or Atomicat publishing destination
- URL slug
- Page status
After publishing, open the live URL in a browser and test it again.
Step 9: Test the live page​
After publishing, test the page as if you were a visitor.
Recommended checks:
- Open the page in a private browser window.
- Submit a test lead form.
- Click every main button.
- Check that the correct thank-you page or next step opens.
- Test on mobile.
- Confirm that the lead appears in Atomicat if the page has a form.
Quick checklist​
Use this checklist before sending traffic:
- Page name is clear
- Main headline is updated
- Buttons point to the correct destination
- Images are replaced
- Mobile version looks good
- SEO title and description are configured
- Form is tested
- Pixel or tracking is tested if used
- Page is published to the correct URL
Frequently asked questions​
Can I create a page without a custom domain?
Yes. You can create and edit pages before connecting a custom domain. For professional campaigns, connect a custom domain before launch.
Should I start from a template or blank page?
Templates are recommended for beginners because they give you a ready-made structure. Blank pages are better when you already know exactly what you want to build.
What is the most important thing to test?
Test the visitor journey. Make sure buttons, forms, redirects, and the mobile layout work correctly before sending traffic.