Most small businesses don't have a website. Not because they don't want one — but because building one takes time, money, and technical knowledge they don't have.
Meanwhile, almost every business already has a Google Maps listing with hours, photos, and dozens of customer reviews sitting there, doing nothing beyond Maps.
What if all that data could become a website automatically?
That's exactly what PlaceToSite does.
The Problem
Here's a number that surprised me: over 40% of small businesses still don't have a website. They rely entirely on Google Maps, Instagram, or WhatsApp for their online presence.
The existing solutions fall into two camps:
- Website builders (Wix, Squarespace) — powerful, but you still have to design everything yourself. For a restaurant owner who barely checks email, that's a non-starter.
- AI website generators — most of them ask you to fill out forms, pick templates, and write copy. That's not really "AI doing the work."
Neither approach uses the richest data source a business already has: customer reviews.
The Idea
Every Google Maps listing contains:
- Business name, category, and address
- Operating hours
- Photos uploaded by customers and the owner
- Dozens (sometimes hundreds) of reviews describing exactly what makes the business special
A café's reviews might mention "best cold brew in town" and "cozy reading corner." A mechanic might get praised for "honest pricing" and "same-day service." This is better marketing copy than most copywriters would write — and it's already there, for free.
PlaceToSite takes a Google Maps link and turns all of that into a complete website.
How It Works
Step 1: Paste Your Maps Link
That's the only input. No forms, no questionnaires, no template picking.
https://maps.google.com/?cid=1234567890
Step 2: AI Does Everything
Behind the scenes, PlaceToSite:
- Fetches business data — name, category, address, hours, photos from the Maps listing
- Analyzes customer reviews using AI to extract key themes, strengths, and unique selling points
- Generates the website — copy, layout, sections, SEO metadata, structured data (FAQ + SoftwareApplication schema), all tailored to that specific business
The review analysis is the magic part. Instead of generic "Welcome to our restaurant" text, the site highlights what customers actually say:
"Customers love the homemade pasta and the garden seating area"
This is real social proof, pulled directly from reviews, presented as the business's unique story.
Step 3: Publish
The site goes live instantly on a placetosite.com subdomain. Custom domains are supported too.
What Makes It Different
I looked at existing tools before building this. Here's where PlaceToSite stands out:
Review-powered content: This is the core differentiator. Most AI site generators ask you to describe your business. PlaceToSite lets your customers describe it — through their reviews.
Multilingual from day one: Supports English, Turkish, German, and Arabic (with full RTL support). Not an afterthought — built into the architecture.
Zero input required: One link. That's it. No credit card, no email verification, no 15-step onboarding.
SEO baked in: Structured data (schema.org), canonical URLs, meta tags, and FAQ sections are auto-generated. The sites are built to rank.
7 days free, no card needed: Try it, see the result, then decide.
Technical Stack
For the technically curious:
-
Frontend: Next.js with App Router, internationalized routing (
next-intl) - Backend: Supabase (PostgreSQL + Auth + RLS)
- AI: Custom pipeline for review analysis and content generation
- Payments: Polar.sh (Merchant of Record)
- Hosting: Vercel
- Fonts: Plus Jakarta Sans + Merriweather
The whole thing runs lean. No Kubernetes, no microservices drama. Just a well-structured Next.js app with Supabase handling the data layer.
Real Examples
Here are some sites generated by PlaceToSite — each one is different because each business has different reviews:
- A hotel in Edirne whose site highlights "family atmosphere and spotless rooms" — exactly what reviewers praise
- A computer repair shop in Bursa where the generated copy emphasizes "instant solutions for technical problems"
- A pide restaurant in Kuşadası branded as "the most delicious pide in town" — straight from customer reviews
None of these businesses wrote a single word. Their customers did.
What I Learned Building This
Review data is incredibly rich. Businesses often don't realize their own strengths until you show them what customers consistently mention. One café owner was surprised that "friendly staff" appeared in 80% of their reviews — they just thought that was normal.
The hardest part is the "one input" constraint. Building an AI pipeline that makes good decisions with zero user guidance is significantly harder than building one that asks 20 questions. But the user experience payoff is worth it.
Multi-language is hard. Not the translation part — the routing, SEO, and RTL layout parts. Turkish with no prefix, English with /en/, Arabic with full RTL... each edge case spawns three more.
Try It
If you have a business (or know someone who does), paste a Google Maps link at placetosite.com and see what comes out. It takes 60 seconds.
No credit card. No signup wall. Just paste and see.
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