AI Won't Replace Web Developers β But It Might Make Them Bad at Their Jobs
I Tried to Vibe Code My Own Marketing Site Last Weekend.
As the owner of a digital agency, I felt like I had to test this myself. If this is what clients are going to be doing with their budgets, I need to understand it firsthand.
One animation β just one β took 50 credits and 50 variations of the same prompt. At the end of it, the animation was still slightly off. And the fix broke two other components.
What That Experience Confirmed
AI is effective at producing something that resembles a website.
But there's a significant difference between something that looks like a website and something that actually reflects a brand β something that makes someone feel something when they land on it.
That gap isn't closed by a better prompt. It comes from years of building things and caring enough to notice why 4px of padding feels different from 6px, or why one animation curve feels confident and another feels clunky.
The Homogenization Problem
Every AI-generated site is starting to look the same. Same layouts. Same hero sections. Same interaction patterns. Same color palettes. Because they're all optimized for the same definition of "good enough."
Our clients don't hire us for good enough. They hire us because they want their digital presence to actually reflect the quality of their work β and the two things are not the same.
Where AI Actually Helps
I'm not dismissing it. I use it. It speeds things up and cuts out a lot of the repetitive work. For boilerplate components, documentation, and debugging, it's genuinely useful.
But the risk I see β especially among junior and mid-level developers β is over-reliance. You start prompting for everything. You stop working through problems yourself. You stop growing in the way you used to, because the answer is always one prompt away.
The Amazon Example
Amazon recently held a company-wide meeting about AI-assisted code changes running without proper guardrails. An AWS AI tool tried to make a minor infrastructure update and ended up deleting and rebuilding the entire environment, causing a 13-hour recovery.
Amazon called it an "extremely limited event" β but the response was immediate: junior and mid-level engineers now need senior approval before anything ships.
The companies that win with AI will be the ones who build the right guardrails around it. Not the ones who move the fastest.
The Real Risk
AI won't take your job as a developer. But it might make you bad at it.
Use it where it helps. Build the guardrails. Don't let it do your thinking.
I went into that weekend half expecting to feel threatened. I came out more confident than ever in what our team at DoodleWeb actually does.
I Tried to Vibe Code My Own Marketing Site Last Weekend.
As the owner of a digital agency, I felt like I had to test this myself. If this is what clients are going to be doing with their budgets, I need to understand it firsthand.
One animation β just one β took 50 credits and 50 variations of the same prompt. At the end of it, the animation was still slightly off. And the fix broke two other components.
What That Experience Confirmed
AI is effective at producing something that resembles a website.
But there's a significant difference between something that looks like a website and something that actually reflects a brand β something that makes someone feel something when they land on it.
That gap isn't closed by a better prompt. It comes from years of building things and caring enough to notice why 4px of padding feels different from 6px, or why one animation curve feels confident and another feels clunky.
The Homogenization Problem
Every AI-generated site is starting to look the same. Same layouts. Same hero sections. Same interaction patterns. Same color palettes. Because they're all optimized for the same definition of "good enough."
Our clients don't hire us for good enough. They hire us because they want their digital presence to actually reflect the quality of their work β and the two things are not the same.
Where AI Actually Helps
I'm not dismissing it. I use it. It speeds things up and cuts out a lot of the repetitive work. For boilerplate components, documentation, and debugging, it's genuinely useful.
But the risk I see β especially among junior and mid-level developers β is over-reliance. You start prompting for everything. You stop working through problems yourself. You stop growing in the way you used to, because the answer is always one prompt away.
The Amazon Example
Amazon recently held a company-wide meeting about AI-assisted code changes running without proper guardrails. An AWS AI tool tried to make a minor infrastructure update and ended up deleting and rebuilding the entire environment, causing a 13-hour recovery.
Amazon called it an "extremely limited event" β but the response was immediate: junior and mid-level engineers now need senior approval before anything ships.
The companies that win with AI will be the ones who build the right guardrails around it. Not the ones who move the fastest.
The Real Risk
AI won't take your job as a developer. But it might make you bad at it.
Use it where it helps. Build the guardrails. Don't let it do your thinking.
I went into that weekend half expecting to feel threatened. I came out more confident than ever in what our team at DoodleWeb actually does.

CMS Security Best Practices
Introduction
βSecurity threats are on the rise, and your CMS could be a prime target for hackers. From data breaches to malware injections, vulnerabilities can disrupt user trust and tarnish your brand reputation. Implementing best practices is crucial for maintaining a secure online presence.
Key Security Measures
- Regular Updates and Patches
- Always update your CMS to the latest version, including themes and plugins.
- Vulnerabilities are frequently discovered, and patches address these known security holes.
- Strong Authentication
- Use strong, unique passwords for each admin account.
- Implement multi-factor authentication (MFA) wherever possible to add an extra layer of security.
- Secure Hosting Environment
- Choose hosting providers known for solid security protocols (firewalls, DDoS protection, SSL certificates).
- Conduct regular server and application scans.
- Access Control
- Assign user roles and permissions carefully.
- Limit admin privileges only to those who need them.
- Frequent Backups
- Maintain regular backups of your site and store them offsite.
- Frequent backups reduce downtime and data loss in case of an attack.
- Monitor and Audit
- Use security plugins and automated monitoring tools that can detect suspicious activity.
- Regularly review access logs to spot potential breaches.
Effective SEO Strategies for Your CMS
Introduction
βSearch Engine Optimization (SEO) is crucial for driving organic traffic to your website. A well-structured CMS can make it easier to implement SEO best practices, but knowing how to leverage its features is essential for achieving top search engine rankings.
Key SEO Strategies
- Keyword Research and Placement
- Use keyword research tools to identify relevant search terms.
- Incorporate keywords naturally into page titles, headings, and content.
- Optimized URLs and Meta Tags
- Clean, descriptive URLs help search engines and users understand your pages.
- Write compelling meta titles and descriptions that encourage click-throughs.
- Mobile-Friendly Design
- Choose responsive themes or templates that adjust to different devices.
- Mobile experience is a significant ranking factor for Google.
- Site Speed Optimization
- Use caching plugins, optimize images, and minimize scripts to speed up page loads.
- Fast-loading sites rank better and improve user retention.
- Structured Data and Schema Markup
- Implement schema markup to help search engines interpret content more accurately.
- Better interpretation often leads to enhanced search result snippets and higher click-through rates.
- Internal Linking and Sitemaps
- Create a clear internal linking structure to help both users and search engines navigate your site.
- Submit an XML sitemap to Google Search Console for better indexing.
β

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