Your UniLink profile doesn't have to be a single page. Pages Studio lets you create a full multi-page website — landing pages, product pages, about pages — all connected under one account.
A single-page link-in-bio works well when you have a handful of links to share. But as your brand grows, you need more room — a dedicated page for your services, a landing page for a specific product launch, an about page that tells your full story. Pages Studio gives you that room without moving to a separate website builder. Everything stays in UniLink, connected to your existing analytics, blocks, and audience.
What Pages Studio Does
Pages Studio is a multi-page builder inside UniLink that lets you create, manage, and publish additional pages beyond your main profile page. Each page you create is a full-featured UniLink canvas — you can add any block to it (Banner, Products, Videos, Forms, Text, etc.), set its own design, and give it a unique URL slug.
Pages are connected through navigation. You can add a navigation menu to any page that links to other pages in your site, letting visitors move naturally between your home page, about section, and product pages. This turns your UniLink profile from a single scrolling page into a proper multi-page website that visitors can explore.
Every page in Pages Studio lives under your existing unil.ink/username domain (or your connected custom domain). You control the slug — the part after your username — so you can create clean, descriptive URLs like unil.ink/yourname/services or unil.ink/yourname/launch. This makes pages shareable as standalone links and helps search engines understand your site's structure.
How to Get Started With Pages Studio
- Open your dashboard — log in to UniLink and navigate to your profile editor by clicking Edit Profile.
- Find Pages Studio — look for the Pages panel in the left sidebar of the editor, or find Pages Studio in the main dashboard navigation. Click it to open the pages manager.
- See your existing pages — your main profile page is already listed. It's the default page all visitors land on. You cannot delete this page, but you can edit it from here.
- Create a new page — click New Page or Add Page. A dialog appears asking for a page name and URL slug. The name is for your internal reference; the slug becomes part of the public URL.
- Set the URL slug — type a short, descriptive slug with no spaces (use hyphens instead). For example: "about", "services", "spring-sale". The full URL previews below the input field.
- Open the new page in the editor — click Edit on your new page. It opens in the block editor, where it starts empty. Add blocks just as you would on your main page.
- Publish the page — when the page is ready, toggle its status from Draft to Published. Only published pages are accessible to visitors.
How to Use Pages Studio
- Add a navigation menu — in the block editor, add a Navigation block. Configure it to list the pages you want visitors to be able to reach. Set display labels for each link — these are what visitors see, independent of the slug.
- Link between pages in body content — in any Text or Button block, create a hyperlink pointing to another page's URL (e.g., /yourname/services). This lets you cross-link pages within content naturally.
- Set a page as the homepage — in the Pages manager, you can designate any page as the default landing page visitors see when they visit your root URL. Useful when running a campaign where you want a landing page to be the first thing people see.
- Duplicate an existing page — right-click a page in the Pages manager and choose Duplicate. This creates an exact copy with all blocks intact, useful for creating variations of a landing page for A/B testing.
- Reorder pages in the manager — drag page rows up or down to change how they appear in the Pages manager list. This doesn't affect URLs, but helps you keep the most active pages at the top for quick access.
- Archive or delete a page — pages you no longer need can be unpublished (set to Draft) to hide them from visitors without deleting the content. Delete only when you're certain the URL is no longer linked anywhere.
- Preview a page before publishing — use the Preview button in the editor to see exactly what a visitor will see on any device size. Check mobile layout before setting a page live.
Key Settings Explained
| Setting | What it controls | Best practice |
|---|---|---|
| URL slug | The path segment that forms the page's public URL after your username | Keep slugs short (1-3 words), lowercase, hyphen-separated, and descriptive — "spring-sale" beats "page-2" |
| Page status (Draft / Published) | Whether the page is accessible to visitors | Build pages in Draft mode until they're complete; never publish a half-finished page accidentally |
| Default homepage | Which page visitors land on when they visit your root URL | Change the homepage during active campaigns, then switch it back to your main profile once the campaign ends |
| Page title (internal name) | The label shown in the Pages manager and used as the browser tab title | Match the internal name to the page's main heading — makes it easy to identify the right page when editing across many pages |
| Navigation block links | Defines which pages appear in the navigation menu and in what order | Keep navigation to 3-5 links maximum; too many choices slow decision-making and clutter the header on mobile |
How to Get the Most Out of Pages Studio
The most effective Pages Studio setups treat each page as having a single, clear job. A homepage introduces you and routes visitors to the right destination. A services page explains what you offer in detail. A contact page has one call-to-action. When pages try to do everything at once, visitors get confused and leave. Assign one primary goal per page and build every block toward that goal.
Navigation design has an outsized impact on how far visitors explore your site. A navigation menu that's too long — listing every page you've ever created — overwhelms visitors. Limit your main navigation to the 3-5 most important pages. For secondary pages that are linked from body content but not navigation (like a specific product landing page), leave them out of the nav entirely. Visitors who need to find them will follow the in-content links.
Slug hygiene matters more than it seems. Once you share a URL — in a bio, an email, on social media — changing the slug breaks every existing link. Choose slugs deliberately at creation time. If you do need to change a slug, update every place you've used the old URL. There's no automatic redirect when you rename a slug, so dead links hurt both user experience and search engine indexing.
Use the Duplicate page feature aggressively when iterating on landing pages. Rather than editing a live page and risking breaking something, duplicate it, make changes in the copy, and switch which version is live when you're ready. This gives you an instant rollback path — just switch back to the previous page if something goes wrong.
Troubleshooting Common Issues
| Problem | Likely cause | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| New page returns a 404 when visited | Page is still in Draft status and has not been published | Open the Pages manager, find the page, and toggle its status to Published. Wait a few seconds for the change to propagate |
| Slug field shows an error on save | Slug contains spaces, uppercase letters, or is already used by another page | Slugs must be lowercase, hyphen-separated, and unique within your account. Try a more specific name if the one you want is taken |
| Navigation menu not showing on a page | Navigation block was added to one page only; it doesn't apply globally | If you want consistent navigation across all pages, add a Navigation block to each page individually, or use the site header settings if available in your theme |
| Visitors see the wrong homepage | A campaign page was set as default and never reverted | Go to Pages manager, find your main profile page, and click Set as Homepage to restore it as the default landing page |
Pros
- Expand from a single link page to a full multi-page website without leaving UniLink or using a separate tool
- Custom slugs give every page a clean, shareable URL under your own domain
- Page duplication makes it fast to iterate on landing pages and test variations without risking your live content
- Navigation blocks connect pages into a coherent site structure that visitors can explore naturally
Cons
- Changing a slug after a page is published breaks all existing links to it — plan slugs carefully upfront
- Navigation blocks must be added individually per page; there's no single global header that auto-applies everywhere
- More pages means more maintenance — keep only pages you actively use to avoid a cluttered Pages manager
Frequently Asked Questions
How many pages can I create with Pages Studio?
The number of pages available depends on your plan. Free accounts have a limited page count; paid plans allow more pages. Check your plan details in account settings to see your current limit.
Can each page have its own design and color scheme?
Yes. Each page can have its own block-level design settings. However, if you've set global brand colors or fonts in your Design System, those apply across all pages by default. You can override them per page by adjusting individual block styles.
Can I use a custom domain for my Pages Studio pages?
Yes. If you've connected a custom domain to your UniLink account, all pages — including those created in Pages Studio — are accessible under your custom domain. The slug structure (yourdomain.com/services, yourdomain.com/about) works the same way.
Do all pages share the same analytics dashboard?
Yes. All pages are tracked in your UniLink analytics. The dashboard shows page-level traffic so you can see how many visitors each individual page receives, not just your total profile views.
What happens to a page if I delete it — do old links still work?
No. Deleting a page removes it permanently and the URL returns a 404. Any links pointing to that page — in bios, emails, or other pages — will break. Set the page to Draft (unpublished) instead of deleting if there's any chance the URL is still being shared.
Key Takeaways
- Pages Studio turns your UniLink profile into a multi-page website — create landing pages, about pages, and product pages all under one account.
- Each page gets a unique URL slug; plan slugs carefully because changing them after publishing breaks existing links.
- Add Navigation blocks to connect pages and help visitors move through your site naturally.
- Use Draft status to build pages privately before they go live, and Duplicate to iterate on landing pages safely.
- Temporarily set a campaign page as your homepage during a launch, then revert when the campaign ends.
Ready to build a full website on UniLink?
Sign up for free, open Pages Studio, and start creating the additional pages your brand needs — landing pages, about pages, service pages — all connected under your UniLink domain.
Get Started Free