Launched this week

Brila
One-page websites from real Google Maps reviews
1.1K followers
One-page websites from real Google Maps reviews
1.1K followers
Website generators give you a template with made-up copy. You rewrite it for hours – still sounds generic. Brila does content first. It reads your Google Maps reviews, finds why customers actually choose you using Jobs to Be Done, and builds a one-page site from real patterns, real wording, real photos. When a business has enough reviews, the results often surprise even the owners. Not a single prompt – a serious AI system behind every website. Free plan gives you a fully generated site.








Is the research summary available on its own, outside the page?
Brila
@daria__andrea not yet. Right now the research is embedded in the one-page site. We’re considering a standalone export (JTBD report / PDF / doc) for people who want to use it directly in marketing – if that’s your use case, what format would you prefer?
Brila
@daria__andrea This is our next step. Create the research dashboards with multiple sources and live updates.
Awesome idea. Thank you, Daria.
Could work even for businesses that already have a site and just need better messaging
Brila
@terno totally, that’s a common use case. Even if you already have a website, Brila can pull the “why people choose you” patterns from reviews so you can upgrade your messaging (homepage, bio, ads etc) without guessing
Brila
@terno That's definitely the next feature or one of the next features. Thank you for highlighting it. Another great idea of yours is to create a report, not necessarily a website.
Albato
Can this help rewrite an existing site instead of only creating a Brila page?
Brila
@wenddy_dias1 Not yet! This is a real MVP with Google Maps. Next we will add more sources of data, including existing websites and structured interviews with owners.
Brila
@wenddy_dias1 not yet – right now Brila starts from a Google Maps link. Feeding an existing website URL is on our roadmap, since a lot of people want to refresh messaging without rebuilding from scratch.
Brila
@wenddy_dias1 This is definitely the next feature or one of the next features. Also generating insights or content is one of the top features too. Not everyone needs a simple website. Many have some more advanced already. Will do. Thank you, Wenddy.
smart pivot from review aggregators. curious whether the one-page constraint is a product decision or a SEO tradeoff - local businesses often need ranking, not just a presence.
Brila
@mykola_kondratiuk Definitely, we need SEO: multiple pages, cross-linking, keyword selection, and even llms.txt.
Beyond the technological aspect, what's interesting is that the product helps a hairdresser, a restaurant, or a pizzeria (I had to mention it, I'm Italian) improve their brand and positioning. Sure, a prompt on Lovable, or one on which terminal with OpenAI, Claude, etc., could do the same thing, but that doesn't diminish the idea. The hairdresser in Amarillo wants to work, not type prompts. Well done.
Brila
@ripolissimogit Grazie mille! You are absolutely right, like Claude Code says.
As a part Italian, I had to start with a pizzeria. Here is the very first website generated with an early prototype of Brila: https://gatto-nero.vercel.app/pizzeria.html
It's true that even simple wrappers around foundation models do an important job. In fact, our product started with prompts on OpenAI and Claude too.
At the same time, let me defend a little bit how we spent almost a year on our experiments - it's not a simple wrapper around a prompt or two. there is an agentic workflow to build what it builds, especially getting a balance between unique insights and popular insights. This way, it doesn't fall into praising obvious positioning that corresponds to each business and doesn't fall into the unique advantages few users want. Also, it's quite expensive workflow. From our experience, saving on tokens leads to the marketing bias.
That is our humble investment into finding something special in each pizzeria. Our first pizzeria, Il Gatto Nero, is all about authenticity. The owners are proud Italians who source ingredients across a continent and talk hours about it.
A bit like us talking about our agentic workflow.
@visualpharm You're 100% right on all counts. The balance between unique and popular insights is a real problem, and most tools just skip it. Saving on tokens producing generic marketing copy — absolutely, I've seen it too. And a year of iteration on an agentic workflow is clearly not a wrapper. My point was simply about keeping real utility at the center — which is exactly what you did, so we actually agree 😄 The only thing I disagree with is the pizzeria choice. I hate pizza. (I know, worst Italian ever.)
Brila
@ripolissimogit Thank you for your support. I promise I won't be defensive for the rest of the day, haha.
Hating pizza? I feel my Italian wife's vibes. Why doesn't Italy strip you guys from Italian citizenship is out of my understanding 😂
Wow this is very interesting! as a frequent user of website builders, I can see the appeal here! I think the tough thing coming to mind is that if it's strictly reviews only, it might not cover all services someone offers. For example for photography or tech work, someone might have a page with good reviews for wedding content, but it doesn't mention that they also do professional headshots.
Also, if someone has very limited reviews, would it limit the usability of Brila? ie, less than 3 reviews. Or if someone's new, is Brila totally out for them?
Brila
@theapricotapp You nailed it! We have a limited ability to push for services that businesses want to sell. Instead, we identify the services that sell well. That’s the opposite workflow.
We start with customer needs, not business needs.
This conflict happens all the time. Musicians want to perform new songs, while the audience wants the old hits. Businesses want to push high-margin services, while customers look for value. We still need to find a balance.
One solution could be a Cursor-style chat to update the website explicitly. If there is a new product, a business could feature it immediately without waiting for recognition from customer reviews. Great idea - thank you.
Now about the number of reviews. From our experience, meaningful results start at 5–10 reviews, but more is always better.
Is this built mainly for local businesses with a physical location, or does it work for service businesses that don't have a strong Google Maps presence?
Brila
@vik_sh The former. We will add more sources of data in the future; that's next in the backlog.