Divi website design

What does a Divi website designer actually do?

Short version: A Divi website designer is a web designer who specializes in building custom WordPress sites with the Divi theme. Instead of just dropping in a layout pack, they plan your structure, design the experience, and build a fast, maintainable site that actually supports your organization’s goals. I’ve been designing and building WordPress sites with Divi since 2016.

If you’ve spent any time around WordPress, you’ve probably heard of Divi. It’s a powerful visual theme and builder—but what exactly does a Divi website designer do, and when is it worth hiring one instead of trying to DIY a layout pack?

This guide breaks down what a Divi website designer really does, how that’s different from a generic web designer, and what to look for if you’re thinking about hiring one for your next build or rebuild.

What is a Divi website designer?

A Divi website designer is a web designer who specializes in building custom websites using WordPress and the Divi theme.

Instead of just installing a theme and hitting “import demo,” a Divi website designer:

  • Plans the structure of your site (sitemap, page types, user journeys)
  • Designs how the site looks and feels (branding, layout, typography, spacing)
  • Builds it in WordPress + Divi, configuring modules, templates, and dynamic content
  • Tunes it for speed, mobile, and SEO basics, so it doesn’t just look good—it works

In other words: a Divi website designer is not just someone who has used Divi before. It’s someone who uses Divi as the tool to deliver a complete website that supports your organization and your goals.

What does a Divi website designer actually do for your business?

Here’s what a good Divi website designer should handle for you from end to end.

1. Understand your organization and goals

Before any pixels are pushed around, the starting point is your business, not Divi.

A proper Divi website designer will:

  • Ask about your organization, services, and audience
  • Clarify what you want your site to do:
    • Generate leads or inquiries
    • Drive bookings or ticket sales
    • Support members, donors, or partners
    • Communicate impact, trust, or credibility
  • Review your current site (if you have one) and spot what’s working and what’s not

The goal of this phase is a clear answer to:
“If this Divi site works perfectly, what changes in your business?”

2. Plan the site structure and user flows

Once the goals are clear, your Divi designer plans the architecture of the site:

  • Sitemap (what pages you need and how they relate)
  • Core page types (services, locations, programs, resources, properties, etc.)
  • Entry points (home, landing pages, search results, campaigns)
  • Conversion paths (how visitors move from “just browsing” to taking action)

This is where content-heavy sites—like accounting firms, tourism boards, nonprofits, orchestras, rental management companies, or real estate platforms—live or die. Without a clear structure, Divi can’t fix the confusion.

3. Design the layouts and visual language in Divi

With the structure in place, the Divi website designer creates the visual system:

  • Homepage layout that introduces who you are, what you do, and next steps
  • Key page templates for services, destinations, programs, properties, or product listings
  • Section patterns (hero areas, stats, testimonials, case studies, FAQs, CTAs)
  • Typography, color, spacing, and component styles that match your brand and feel professional

The point here isn’t “using Divi modules.” The point is using Divi to express your brand in a way that feels modern, is easy to scan, and guides people toward the actions you care about.

4. Build the site in WordPress + Divi

Next, your Divi designer shifts from pure design to implementation:

  • Setting up WordPress and Divi (or working with your existing install)
  • Building pages, templates, and theme builder layouts
  • Creating custom headers, footers, and global sections
  • Wiring up dynamic content (custom post types, listings, repeating elements)

This might include, for example:

  • Practice-area listing templates for a professional services firm
  • Stay / Eat / Do / Plan layouts for a tourism board
  • Program / initiative pages and stories for a nonprofit or orchestra
  • Property search and detail pages for a real estate platform
  • Membership dashboards or resource libraries for members or donors

This is where Divi stops being “that theme you bought” and becomes the actual front-end of your organization’s digital presence.

5. Integrate the tools you actually rely on

Most serious sites are more than just pages and images. A Divi website designer also connects the tools you already rely on:

  • Forms & lead capture (contact, consultations, applications, interest forms)
  • Booking systems (vacation rentals, tours, events, appointments)
  • WooCommerce (products, tickets, event registrations, payments)
  • Memberships & gated content (donors, members, clients)
  • Email lists & automations (Mailchimp, ActiveCampaign, and similar tools)

The job isn’t just “embedding a plugin.” It’s designing the flow so visitors understand what’s happening, the experience feels smooth and on-brand, and your back-end systems actually receive clean, useful data.

6. Tune for performance, mobile, and SEO basics

A Divi site that looks good on a big monitor but breaks on mobile or loads slowly is not doing its job.

A good Divi website designer will:

  • Optimize images and layouts for speed
  • Make sure the design is truly responsive, not just “shrunk”
  • Use semantic headings, internal links, and clean URLs
  • Set up basic on-page SEO hygiene (titles, meta descriptions, alt text, etc.)

This doesn’t replace a full SEO campaign, but it ensures your Divi site isn’t fighting against you from day one.

7. Launch support and long-term maintainability

Finally, a Divi website designer should help you:

  • Review the site before launch and fix any last issues
  • Manage a smooth launch (domain, hosting, redirects if you’re migrating)
  • Train your team on how to safely edit content in Divi
  • Optionally support you with maintenance and ongoing improvements

The goal: you end up with a clean, maintainable Divi build—not a maze of mystery sections that breaks the moment someone tries to update a headline.

Divi website designer vs. generic web designer vs. DIY

So why not just use any web designer or build it yourself?

Divi website designer vs. generic web designer

A generic web designer might work in a variety of tools but not know Divi deeply, create a pretty design that someone else has to figure out how to build, or use a theme that you can’t easily update.

A Divi website designer knows Divi’s strengths and limitations, designs with Divi’s capabilities in mind, and uses the theme builder, templates, and modules in a way that’s structured and maintainable.

Divi website designer vs. DIY Divi layouts

Divi comes with templates and layout packs, so why hire a designer at all? DIY Divi builds often struggle with inconsistent structure, overloaded layouts, confusing navigation, and technical debt that makes future improvements painful.

A professional Divi website designer starts from your goals, then chooses or creates layouts to match. The result is almost always a cleaner, faster route to a credible, effective site than tinkering for months on your own.

When should you hire a Divi website designer?

You probably don’t need a specialist for a quick one-page experiment.

Hiring a Divi website designer makes sense when:

  • Your website is a serious business asset (credibility, leads, bookings, members)
  • You have more than a handful of important pages or content types
  • You’re tired of patching together a site that never feels finished
  • You’ve outgrown your DIY build or pre-made layout pack
  • You want one person to handle design and build, not juggle three freelancers

This is especially true for:

  • Professional services firms (accounting, legal, consulting)
  • Tourism boards and travel brands
  • Nonprofits and arts organizations
  • Real estate platforms and rental management companies
  • Online programs, platforms, and membership-based businesses

How to choose the right Divi website designer

If you’re comparing Divi designers or agencies, here’s what to look for.

1. Real Divi experience (not just “I’ve used it”)

Ask for:

  • Live sites built with Divi
  • A mix of brochure, booking/eCommerce, and membership/portal projects if that matches your needs
  • A sense of how long they’ve been working with it (for example, I’ve been working with Divi since 2016)

2. A clear process

A good Divi designer can outline their process quickly. It should include:

  • Discovery and goals
  • Information architecture and UX
  • Visual design and layout
  • Build and integrations
  • Review, launch, and support

If their process is basically, “send me your copy and I’ll throw it into Divi,” that’s a red flag.

3. Clients and work similar to yours

You don’t need someone who’s worked in your exact niche, but patterns help. Look for Divi projects for firms, tourism, nonprofits, arts, real estate, platforms, or memberships if that’s where you operate.

4. Communication and ownership

You’re hiring someone to co-own a critical asset in your business. Good signs include thoughtful questions, clear expectations, honest boundaries, and an eye on what happens after launch—not just handing you a zip file and disappearing.

What it’s like to work with me as your Divi website designer

At Divi Dojo, the focus is simple: I design and build custom WordPress Divi websites for serious businesses and organizations.

Since 2016, that’s included:

  • Custom brochure and firm sites
  • Booking and eCommerce experiences
  • Membership and portal-style sites for members, donors, or clients

If you’d like a deeper look at how I handle full projects from discovery to launch, you can explore my dedicated service page:

See how I work as a Divi website designer →

Quick FAQ about Divi website designers

Do I really need a Divi website designer, or can I just DIY with layouts? +
If your site is mission-critical for credibility, leads, bookings, or members, a professional Divi designer will almost always get you there faster and with a cleaner, more maintainable build. For very small or temporary projects, DIY can be enough, but for serious organizations the cost of a confusing or fragile site is usually higher than the cost of hiring help.
Can a Divi designer work with my existing site instead of starting from scratch? +
Yes. In many cases, the best move is to audit your current site, keep what’s working, and rebuild the structure and layouts in a cleaner, more strategic way rather than throwing everything away. A Divi website designer can help you migrate from other builders or from an older Divi build into something that’s easier to manage and grow.
Are Divi sites good for SEO and performance? +
They can be. Divi is just a tool. In the hands of someone who understands performance, content structure, and UX, a Divi site can be fast, clean, and SEO-friendly. In the wrong hands, any builder can become bloated. A good Divi website designer pays close attention to speed, responsiveness, and on-page SEO best practices while building.
How long does a typical Divi project take from start to launch? +
Timelines depend on scope, content, and integrations, but most serious brochure, booking, or membership sites can move from kickoff to launch in a few focused weeks when the process is clear. During discovery, I map out a realistic schedule so you know when each milestone will land and what’s needed from you along the way.
What happens after the site is launched? +
After launch, you can choose to manage the site internally or keep working together. I offer ongoing support and maintenance options for updates, performance tuning, and small improvements, and I can train your team so they feel confident making day-to-day updates directly in Divi without breaking the site.

Ready to talk about your own Divi website?

If you’re past the experimenting phase and ready for a Divi site that really supports your organization, the next step is simple: a short conversation about where you are now, what you’re trying to do, and what a custom Divi build could look like for you.

Start a Divi project conversation See how I handle full builds →