5 Beneficios del Generador de Widgets para tu agencia

March 25, 2021
0 minute read

El Generador de Widgets es una herramienta robusta que le permitirá a tu agencia crear sus propios widgets personalizados y ofrecerlos a sus clientes.

Si deseas integrar servicios adicionales para las páginas web de tus clientes o, proporcionar nuevos elementos de interfaz de usuario, puedes hacerlo a través de un widget personalizado. 

Los widgets personalizados agregan una funcionalidad increíble a los sitios web, lo que representa un gran valor agregado para tus clientes. A través del generador de Widgets de Duda, como herramienta integrada, incrementarás múltiples beneficios importantes para el crecimiento de tu agencia.


 
Ahorra más tiempo

Como en la mayoría de las empresas, sabemos que tu agencia siempre está buscando formas de ahorrar tiempo en las tareas diarias. Sin embargo, si ya has tenido que crear widgets en otras plataformas, es probable que estés familiarizado con el volumen de horas (o días) necesarios para su construcción.

¡En Duda ese tiempo lo empleas de otra manera! Puedes crear widgets personalizados en pocas horas y, con el tiempo extra que ahorras, tu agencia puede crear aún más widgets personalizados o, centrarse en otros servicios. Es una oportunidad para conquistar más upsells y mejorar entregas.

 
Mejora tu flujo de trabajo

 Con el generador de Widgets de Duda, tu agencia tiene la oportunidad de aportar mayor eficiencia a su flujo de trabajo. Por ejemplo, realizar actualizaciones con el Widget Builder es un proceso continuo que se puede realizar sin quebrar ningún widget existente. ¿Alguna vez te has parado a pensar en la cantidad de horas dedicadas al proceso de corrección de widgets antiguos? 

Para continuar optimizando la eficiencia, también puedes utilizar Widget Builder para crear widgets personalizados que ya automaticen procesos manuales (como agregar o actualizar la información comercial del cliente) o, integrar servicios de terceros (algún mecanismo de reserva de citas u horarios, por ejemplo). Además, todos los widgets personalizados que has creado, podrán ser utilizados a gran escala.

 
Procesos creativos más colaborativos

Sabemos que una colaboración sustanciosa es esencial en el flujo de trabajo y éxito de tu agencia, no solo entre tu equipo, sino también con sus clientes. Por lo tanto, tu agencia debe aprovechar todas las oportunidades posibles para facilitar la gestión de sus talentos y clientes, incluso en el proceso de construcción de widgets. 

Tanto tu equipo como tus clientes pueden editar sus widgets personalizados con el Widget Builder, sin problemas. Por lo tanto, este proceso se torna más sencillo para tu equipo, agilizando la entrega a los clientes y conduciendo de forma mucho más simple el desarrollo de esta tarea.

 
Diseño escalable 

 Los widgets personalizados son tan escalables como detallados. Un widget personalizado se puede usar varias veces, lo que significa que el tiempo invertido en crear un widget, resultará en miles de casos más, donde su aprovechamiento estará apto para reutilizarse, en sitios web de otros clientes. ¡Estamos hablando de eficiencia!

Recordemos que, siempre que crees un widget personalizado, no necesariamente tiene que ser utilizado para un solo sitio web o cliente. Es posible crear un arsenal de widgets para ser utilizados a escala, con múltiples clientes, en un mercado vertical.

Por ejemplo, puedes crear un widget de localización de tiendas, que ayude a los franquiciados a mostrarles a sus clientes dónde encontrar todas las tiendas físicas más cercanas a ellos y, usarlo para varios clientes en el mismo segmento. 

Dependiendo del tamaño de tu agencia y sus objetivos comerciales, el generador de Widgets puede ser la herramienta que ayude a tu agencia a expandirse a nuevos mercados y permitir nuevas fuentes de ingresos, lo que nos lleva a nuestro próximo beneficio. 

 
Mayores ingresos

Una excelente manera de aumentar tus ingresos es ofrecer widgets personalizados como parte de un paquete de ventas adicional a tus servicios de creación de páginas web. Dado que los widgets personalizados brindarán funcionalidades adicionales a los sitios web, estos pueden ser conectados con tus servicios de back-end, o con un CRM, tu agencia podrá posicionar esos servicios como parte de un paquete de 'sitio optimizado'. 


 
Amplía tu alcance

“El generador de Widgets de Duda nos permitió integrar los datos de nuestra API con nuestros Sitios Web Duda de forma dinámica, sin la necesidad de cambiar la API en sí. La interfaz de la herramienta está bien diseñada y la documentación proporcionada nos permitió ponernos en marcha rápidamente. Recién estamos comenzando, pero la flexibilidad de la plataforma nos ha permitido hacer todo lo que necesitábamos hasta ahora y vemos muchas más posibilidades para expandir nuestra funcionalidad."

 
- Christine Conklin, vicepresidenta de servicios de marketing de la empresa estadounidense Signature Travel Network.

Muchos aliados de Duda están utilizando el generador de Widgets para ofrecer más calidad y valor a sus clientes, y tu agencia puede ser la siguiente. Las oportunidades para generar negocios utilizando esta poderosa herramienta, son tan numerosas como los tipos de widgets que podrás crear con ella. Con una cantidad relativamente baja de tiempo, esfuerzos y recursos, podrás aprovechar este útil recurso para trabajar de manera más inteligente y expandir tu negocio.

 

Para obtener más información, visita nuestra página Widget Builder

_________________________________________________

Demonstre seu conhecimento básico sobre criação de sites e se torne um Especialista na Plataforma Duda.


Did you find this article interesting?


Thanks for the feedback!
By Shawn Davis April 1, 2026
Core Web Vitals aren't new, Google introduced them in 2020 and made them a ranking factor in 2021. But the questions keep coming, because the metrics keep changing and the stakes keep rising. Reddit's SEO communities were still debating their impact as recently as January 2026, and for good reason: most agencies still don't have a clear, repeatable way to measure, diagnose, and fix them for clients. This guide cuts through the noise. Here's what Core Web Vitals actually measure, what good scores look like today, and how to improve them—without needing a dedicated performance engineer on every project. What Core Web Vitals measure Google evaluates three user experience signals to determine whether a page feels fast, stable, and responsive: Largest Contentful Paint (LCP) measures how long it takes for the biggest visible element on a page — usually a hero image or headline — to load. Google considers anything under 2.5 seconds good. Above 4 seconds is poor. Interaction to Next Paint (INP) replaced First Input Delay (FID) in March 2024. Where FID measures the delay before a user's first click is registered, INP tracks the full responsiveness of every interaction across the page session. A good INP score is under 200 milliseconds. Cumulative Layout Shift (CLS) measures visual stability — how much page elements unexpectedly move while content loads. A score below 0.1 is good. Higher scores signal that images, ads, or embeds are pushing content around after load, which frustrates users and tanks conversions. These three metrics are a subset of Google's broader Page Experience signals, which also include HTTPS, safe browsing, and mobile usability. Core Web Vitals are the ones you can most directly control and improve. Why your clients' scores may still be poor Core Web Vitals scores vary dramatically by platform, hosting, and how a site was built. Some of the most common culprits agencies encounter: Heavy above-the-fold content . A homepage with an autoplay video, a full-width image slider, and a chat widget loading simultaneously will fail LCP every time. The browser has to resolve all of those resources before it can paint the largest element. Unstable image dimensions . When an image loads without defined width and height attributes, the browser doesn't reserve space for it. It renders the surrounding text, then jumps it down when the image appears. That jump is CLS. Third-party scripts blocking the main thread . Analytics pixels, ad tags, and live chat tools run on the browser's main thread. When they stack up, every click and tap has to wait in line — driving INP scores up. A single slow third-party script can push an otherwise clean site into "needs improvement" territory. Too many web fonts . Each font family and weight is a separate network request. A page loading four font files before rendering any text will fail LCP, especially on mobile connections. Unoptimized images . JPEGs and PNGs served at full resolution, without compression or modern formats like WebP or AVIF, add unnecessary weight to every page load. How to measure them accurately There are two types of Core Web Vitals data you should be looking at for every client: Lab data comes from tools like Google PageSpeed Insights, Lighthouse, and WebPageTest. It simulates page loads in controlled conditions. Lab data is useful for diagnosing specific issues and testing fixes before you deploy them. Field data (also called Real User Monitoring, or RUM) comes from actual users visiting the site. Google collects this through the Chrome User Experience Report (CrUX) and surfaces it in Search Console and PageSpeed Insights. Field data is what Google actually uses as a ranking signal — and it often looks worse than lab data because it reflects real-world device and connection variability. If your client's site has enough traffic, you'll see field data in Search Console under Core Web Vitals. This is your baseline. Lab data helps you understand why the scores are what they are. For clients with low traffic who don't have enough field data to appear in CrUX, you'll be working primarily with lab scores. Set that expectation early so clients understand that improvements may not immediately show up in Search Console. Practical fixes that move the needle Fix LCP: get the hero image loading first The single most effective LCP improvement is adding fetchpriority="high" to the hero image tag. This tells the browser to prioritize that resource over everything else. If you're using a background CSS image for the hero, switch it to anelement — background images aren't discoverable by the browser's preload scanner. Also check whether your hosting serves images through a CDN with caching. Edge delivery dramatically reduces the time-to-first-byte, which feeds directly into LCP. Fix CLS: define dimensions for every media element Every image, video, and ad slot on the page needs explicit width and height attributes in the HTML. If you're using responsive CSS, you can still define the aspect ratio with aspect-ratio in CSS while leaving the actual size fluid. The key is giving the browser enough information to reserve space before the asset loads. Avoid inserting content above existing content after page load. This is common with cookie banners, sticky headers that change height, and dynamically loaded ad units. If you need to show these, anchor them to fixed positions so they don't push content around. Fix INP: reduce what's competing for the main thread Audit third-party scripts and defer or remove anything that isn't essential. Tools like WebPageTest's waterfall view or Chrome DevTools Performance panel show you exactly which scripts are blocking the main thread and for how long. Load chat widgets, analytics, and ad tags asynchronously and after the page's critical path has resolved. For most clients, moving non-essential scripts to load after the DOMContentLoaded event is a meaningful INP improvement with no visible impact on the user experience. For websites with heavy JavaScript — particularly those built on frameworks with large client-side bundles — consider breaking up long tasks into smaller chunks using the browser's Scheduler API or simply splitting components so the main thread isn't locked for more than 50 milliseconds at a stretch. What platforms handle automatically One of the practical advantages of building on a platform optimized for performance is that many of these fixes are applied by default. Duda, for example, automatically serves WebP images, lazy loads below-the-fold content, minifies CSS, and uses efficient cache policies for static assets. As of May 2025, 82% of sites built on Duda pass all three Core Web Vitals metrics — the highest recorded pass rate among major website platforms. That baseline matters when you're managing dozens or hundreds of client sites. It means you're starting each project close to or at a passing score, rather than diagnosing and patching a broken foundation. How much do Core Web Vitals actually affect rankings? Honestly, they're a tiebreaker — not a primary signal. Google has been clear that content quality and relevance still dominate ranking decisions. A well-optimized site with thin, irrelevant content won't outrank a content-rich competitor just because its CLS is 0.05. What Core Web Vitals do affect is the user experience that supports those rankings. Pages with poor LCP scores have measurably higher bounce rates. Sites with high CLS lose users mid-session. Those behavioral signals — time on page, return visits, conversions — are things search engines can observe and incorporate. The practical argument for fixing Core Web Vitals isn't just "because Google said so." It's that faster, more stable pages convert better. Every second of LCP improvement can reduce bounce rates by 15–20% depending on the industry and device mix. For client sites that monetize through leads or eCommerce, that's a revenue argument, not just an SEO argument. A repeatable process for agencies Audit every new site before launch. Run PageSpeed Insights and record LCP, INP, and CLS scores for both mobile and desktop. Flag anything in the "needs improvement" or "poor" range before the client sees the live site. Check Search Console monthly for existing clients. The Core Web Vitals report surfaces issues as they appear in field data. Catching a regression early — before it compounds — is significantly easier than explaining a traffic drop after the fact. Document what you've improved. Clients rarely see Core Web Vitals scores on their own. A monthly one-page performance summary showing before/after scores builds credibility and makes your technical work visible. Prioritize mobile. Google uses mobile-first indexing, and field data shows that mobile CWV scores are almost always worse than desktop. If you only have time to optimize one version, do mobile first. Core Web Vitals aren't a one-time fix. Platforms change, new scripts get added, campaigns bring in new widgets. Build the audit into your workflow and treat it like any other ongoing deliverable, and you'll stay ahead of the issues before they affect your clients' rankings. Duda's platform is built with Core Web Vitals performance in mind. Explore how it handles image optimization, script management, and site speed automatically — so your team spends less time debugging and more time building.
By Ilana Brudo March 31, 2026
Vertical SaaS must transition from tools to an AI-powered Vertical Operating System (vOS). Learn to leverage context, end tech sprawl, and maximize retention.
By Shawn Davis March 27, 2026
Automate client management, instant site generation, and data synchronization with an API-driven website builder to create a scalable growth engine for your SaaS platform.
Show More

Latest posts