Webflow helps marketing teams decide what should change on campaign pages, CMS items, and published site content without bouncing between planning docs and the Webflow admin. With Webflow connected, Juno can review site structure, work with pages, update CMS content, and prepare publishing changes so landing page refreshes, launch copy, and evergreen content fixes stay close to the campaign work already happening in Juno.
What Juno does with Webflow
Webflow gives Juno a practical way for marketers to keep campaign pages, CMS items, and publishing plans in the same conversation as the work. Once connected, Juno can explore site structure, work with pages, review and update CMS content, and prepare publishing changes without making the Webflow admin your second full-time job.
The useful part is not "AI touches the site." It is asking a pointed marketing question, like which launch pages need cleanup or which CMS items are still stuck in draft, and getting back a grounded roadmap, brief, tracker, or draft pack.
Webflow's CMS publishing documentation explains the staged and live states behind content changes, which is exactly the context a marketer needs before nudging anything toward production.
Where it fits in your workflow
Connect Webflow when the next marketing move depends on what is really on the site: a product launch page, an event hub, an SEO refresh, a customer story, or a quick correction that somehow became a six-tab scavenger hunt.
A common workflow starts with a question such as, "What needs to change before this campaign goes live?" Juno can inspect the site shape, check relevant pages, review CMS items, and return a launch readiness tracker with owners, content gaps, draft notes, and publishing next steps.
It also helps after a page has been live for a while. Juno can compare the campaign plan against published content, surface stale CMS entries, suggest the pages that deserve a copy pass, and help decide whether the next move is a page update, a CMS edit, a publishing checklist, or a cleaner brief for web ops.
What you get
- Webflow site structure snapshots that show marketers which pages, collections, and content areas are relevant to the current campaign
- Page update briefs for landing pages, launch pages, and evergreen content that need cleaner copy, metadata, or handoff notes
- CMS item review lists that separate ready-to-update content from drafts, stale entries, and items that need a human decision
- Publishing checklists that keep staged changes, live content, and approval context in one reviewable plan
- Draft-ready outputs for roadmaps, briefs, trackers, and copy packs grounded in what Webflow actually contains
Frequently asked questions
Does Juno replace Webflow?
No. Webflow stays the system for building, editing, reviewing, and publishing your site. Juno brings Webflow context into campaign planning so the marketing work starts from the real page and CMS state.
What should I connect Webflow for first?
Start with a focused site job: review a launch page, clean up CMS items before a campaign, prepare a publishing checklist, or audit evergreen content that keeps slipping down the queue.
Can Juno publish changes?
Juno can help prepare publishing changes and work with publishing actions when the connected Webflow account supports them and the task is explicit. Keep final approvals intentional, especially for campaign pages, CMS templates, and anything tied to paid traffic.
What inputs make the connector most useful?
Bring the site, page names, CMS collection, campaign goal, deadline, and the output you want. Juno is at its best when it knows whether you need a roadmap, a brief, a tracker, or a draft pack.
