Content Templates (Canva / Figma)

Reusable templates for posts, stories, presentations, and marketing materials.

FAQ

What kinds of templates do you create?

Social post systems, stories, carousels, pitch decks, one-pagers, proposals, case study layouts, newsletters, and simple brand kits — built so your team can produce content without redesigning every time.

Canva or Figma — which is better?

Canva is best for fast marketing production by non-designers. Figma is best when you need stricter design systems, scalable components, and more control. Many teams use Figma for the master system and Canva for daily production.

Will templates match our brand and stay consistent?

Yes. We build a template system: typography scale, spacing rules, color logic, and component library. Consistency comes from rules + reusable components, not just pretty frames.

Can templates be connected to a content system (pillars, cadence, formats)?

Yes. Templates work best when paired with a content structure: what you post, why, and how often — plus a library of prompts and reusable copy patterns.

Can you include AI-friendly placeholders and prompts?

Yes. We can build templates with structured fields (hook, proof, CTA, disclaimer, etc.) so you can generate drafts faster while staying on-brand.

What do you need from me to start?

Brand assets (logo, colors, fonts), examples you like, your main content types, and what your team needs to produce most often.

How do you make sure the templates don’t become a mess over time?

We set naming conventions, lock what should not be edited, document how to use the system, and keep a “master set” so people don’t duplicate and drift.

Reusable templates for posts, stories, presentations, and marketing materials.

Q: What kinds of templates do you create? A: Social post systems, stories, carousels, pitch decks, one-pagers, proposals, case study layouts, newsletters, and simple brand kits — built so your team can produce content without redesigning every time.Q: Canva or Figma — which is better? A: Canva is best for fast marketing production by non-designers. Figma is best when you need stricter design systems, scalable components, and more control. Many teams use Figma for the master system and Canva for daily production.Q: Will templates match our brand and stay consistent? A: Yes. We build a template system: typography scale, spacing rules, color logic, and component library. Consistency comes from rules + reusable components, not just pretty frames.Q: Can templates be connected to a content system (pillars, cadence, formats)? A: Yes. Templates work best when paired with a content structure: what you post, why, and how often — plus a library of prompts and reusable copy patterns.Q: Can you include AI-friendly placeholders and prompts? A: Yes. We can build templates with structured fields (hook, proof, CTA, disclaimer, etc.) so you can generate drafts faster while staying on-brand.Q: What do you need from me to start? A: Brand assets (logo, colors, fonts), examples you like, your main content types, and what your team needs to produce most often.Q: How do you make sure the templates don’t become a mess over time? A: We set naming conventions, lock what should not be edited, document how to use the system, and keep a “master set” so people don’t duplicate and drift.

Would you like to know more?

Contact our creative team:

Patriks Zvaigzne

Art Director

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