Turning Gammas Into Webpages
Jon Noronha, co-founder of Gamma, on building AI-powered slides
This demand shows Gamma is moving from a presentation tool into a lightweight publishing tool, which matters because webpages are more durable and commercially valuable than one off decks. Gamma already used responsive, web style cards instead of fixed slides, so users were effectively building microsites before the product fully labeled them that way. That makes webpage publishing a natural expansion of the same editor, not a separate product jump.
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The product mechanics line up with this pull. Gamma was built around vertically stacked, responsive cards that reflow across desktop and mobile, which is much closer to how a simple website behaves than how PowerPoint behaves. Users can create a presentation, document, or webpage from nearly the same workflow.
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The money incentive is stronger in webpages than slides. Slides are often disposable work for a single meeting, while a landing page, personal site, or product explainer can stay live for months and justify paying for custom domains, analytics, and richer publishing controls. That is why webpages can support a more durable SaaS business.
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The closest analog is not Webflow for full custom sites, but Notion Sites and Tome style web native documents. All three start from an editing surface for content creation, then let users publish that content on the web. Gamma’s edge is that its AI can generate the structure, copy, visuals, and layout together in one pass.
The next step is for Gamma to own the prompt to publish workflow for microsites, sales pages, and personal pages, while stopping short of the full complexity of professional web design tools. If it executes there, Gamma can carve out a new category between slideware and website builders, where the core job is turning rough ideas into polished public artifacts fast.