Wireframe
The skeleton of a page, before the visuals - boxes and labels that settle structure and content placement before anyone designs the polish.
- Term
- Wireframe
- Is
- A low-fidelity layout skeleton
- Shows
- Structure & content placement
- Before
- Visual design and build
Forms & parts of speech
Definition in plain terms
A wireframe is a stripped-down, low-fidelity blueprint of a page or screen that shows its structure, layout, and the placement of content and elements - without colors, real images, fonts, or visual polish.
Wireframes use simple boxes, lines, and placeholder text to represent where things go: the header, the headline, the call-to-action, the form, the images. The point is to focus attention on structure, hierarchy, and flow - what goes where and why - before anyone gets distracted by visual details.
Wireframes range from rough sketches to cleaner digital versions, but all share the goal of planning the skeleton first.
They sit early in the design process, before higher-fidelity mockups and prototypes, and are a fast, cheap way to explore and align on layout before committing to detailed design or development.
Why it matters to growth leaders
Wireframes are a practical tool for any growth leader involved in building or optimizing pages - landing pages, signup flows, key screens.
Their value is in separating structure from style: by aligning on the wireframe first, a team can debate the things that most affect conversion - the hierarchy of information, the prominence of the call-to-action, the flow a user follows
without the conversation getting hijacked by opinions on colors and fonts. This is faster and cheaper than designing in full fidelity and reworking, and it leads to better outcomes because the underlying structure (which drives whether a page works) gets deliberate attention.
For a growth leader, encouraging wireframing before visual design instills discipline: get the structure and message right first, then layer on the polish. It's a small process habit that improves both the speed and the conversion performance of the pages growth depends on.
The team produces a low-fidelity skeleton: boxes and placeholder labels showing where the headline, the hero, the call-to-action, the social proof, and the form will sit, with no visual polish.
Suddenly the conversation focuses on what actually drives conversion - the hierarchy of information, how prominent and early the call-to-action appears, the flow a visitor follows down the page - rather than aesthetics.
Aligning on the wireframe is fast and cheap, and it surfaces structural problems (a buried CTA, a weak message order) that would have been expensive to fix after full design. Only once the structure and message are right does the team layer on the visual design.
The growth leader has instilled a simple discipline - structure before style - that makes the build both faster and higher-converting. Using wireframes, the leader ensures the pages growth depends on get their skeleton right before anyone polishes the surface.
Synonyms & antonyms
Synonyms
Antonyms
Origin & history
The wireframe is the low-fidelity blueprint stage of design, focusing on structure, layout, and content placement before visual detail; it lets teams align on what drives a page's effectiveness before investing in polish.
Etymology: source.
Usage trends
Search interest for this term over the last five years:
Common questions
- What is a wireframe?
- A low-fidelity visual outline of a page or screen showing layout, structure, and content placement without colors, images, or polish — used to align on structure before visual design.
- Why use wireframes?
- They separate structure from style, so a team can settle the hierarchy, call-to-action prominence, and flow that drive conversion before getting distracted by colors and fonts — faster and cheaper than reworking full designs.
- How is a wireframe different from a prototype?
- A wireframe is a static, low-fidelity layout skeleton; a prototype is interactive and simulates how the design actually works, used to test flows.
Related tools & calculators
Resources & people to follow
- referenceWikipedia — website wireframe
- referenceUX and CRO practice
- referenceRGM analysis — wireframe first: get structure and message right before visual polish, for faster builds and higher conversion
Curated, non-competitor resources verified per term.
Related training
Disciplines
Areas of marketing where wireframe is a core concern: