Claude Code for salespeople: no coding, just describe the page
Mark Jacobs · Updated Jul 6, 2026
The short answer
You don't have to code. In plain English, describe the pricing or pitch page you want and Claude Code builds it for you. Then Vista deploys it as one buyer link that talks back — the buyer holds a key and reacts by voice on the page, and you get their take filed to the deal. No engineer, no HTML, no dashboard. Free while in beta.
You are a salesperson, not an engineer, and you never want to become one. You do not have to. This is the least technical thing Claude Code can do for you: describe the page you want in plain English, get it built, and send it to your buyer as one link. No code, start to finish.
You don't have to code
You are not going to write code, and you do not need to learn any. Claude Code takes plain sentences, not syntax. It is a version of Claude that can build and change files for you — you say what you want in everyday words, and it does the building. You never open a code editor. You never touch HTML. You describe; it makes.
If you can write a follow-up email, you can do this. "Build me a one-page pricing summary for Acme with three plans and a clear call-to-action at the bottom" is a real instruction. Claude Code reads it and produces the page. When you want a change, you say the change: "Make the middle plan the highlighted one." It updates the page and shows you the result.
What if I have never built a web page before?
That is the normal starting point. You are not building it — you are describing it, and Claude Code does the building. The one skill you need is knowing what your buyer should see, which is the part you already do every day.
What a seller can actually make
Keep it sales-shaped. You are not building software. You are building the pages you already wish you could make without waiting on design or marketing:
- A pricing page for one account, with their name and their numbers on it.
- A pitch one-pager that tells the whole story on a single screen.
- A landing page for one deal — the recap, the next steps, the one case study that matters to them.
Describe it, get it. If you want the step-by-step for the pitch page specifically, see build a pitch page in Claude. This page stays on the part that stops non-technical sellers: you do not write any of it yourself.
The plain-English workflow
The whole loop is four plain steps. There is no jargon in any of them.
- Say what you want. Type the page you have in your head, in the same words you would use to brief a coworker.
- Claude builds it. It writes the page and shows you the result. You look at it the way your buyer will.
- Ask for changes. Too long, wrong color, missing the logo? Say so, and it edits until the page is right.
- Ship it. One command sends it to Vista and hands you back a link. More on that next.
There is no step where you have to understand what is under the hood. You decide what the page says. Claude does the typing.
Ship it as a buyer link
A page on your screen is not a page your buyer can see yet. This is the step Vista handles. From Claude, one command deploys the page you just built and gives you back a live link:
vista deploy acme-pricing.htmlThat link is the room. Put it in an email or a message, and the buyer opens it in their browser. Buyer needs nothing. No account, no login, no install, on a laptop or a phone. For the full walkthrough of publishing straight from Claude, see deploy a Claude artifact for sales — an artifact is just a page you made in Claude.
Hear the reaction, no code needed
The payoff is not the page — it is what the page does next. The link you sent is not a flat page. It is a room your buyer can talk back to. While they are looking at your pricing, they hold ⌘ (or tap) and talk — they say what they actually think, out loud, right on the page.
That reaction comes back to you as a clean, readable message, filed to the deal and tagged for what it is: a question, an objection, a buying signal, a stakeholder to bring in, or an action item. You wrote no code to make any of this happen. You described a page and sent a link, and the buyer's real words came back.
It holds up across a buying committee too. When your champion forwards the link to their CFO, the CFO's reaction comes back as its own message, attributed to them. You can tell whose voice is whose without having to ask. That is a lot to get from a page you built by describing it in a few plain sentences.
Where this beats a page builder
You could reach for a landing-page builder instead. Drag some blocks, publish a page, add a form. The catch is what you get back: a form fill, if you are lucky. A name and an email. Not what the buyer thought. Claude Code — or Codex, OpenAI's coding agent — builds you a page that is yours, and Vista makes it a page that answers.
Describing the page and shipping it is different on the thing that matters. Claude builds the exact page you asked for, so you are not fighting a template. Vista turns it into a room, so what returns is the buyer's real reaction in their own voice — not a form fill, not a name on a list. If it is the design side you are weighing, Claude versus Canva or Figma for a sales one-pager covers that.
No engineer. No HTML. No dashboard to learn. You describe the page, Claude builds it, and Vista brings back what the buyer really thinks. Free while in beta. If you want the bigger picture first, start with what Vista is.
Questions sellers actually ask
- Do I need to know how to code to use Claude Code for sales?
- No. You describe the page you want in plain English, and Claude Code builds it for you — you never write a line of code or touch HTML.
- What can a salesperson actually make with it?
- Pricing pages, pitch one-pagers, and personalized landing pages for a single account. You describe each one, then ship it to your buyer as a link.
- How do I get the page to my buyer?
- You deploy it with Vista as one link and send that. The buyer needs no account, login, or install — they open it in a browser on a laptop or a phone.
- What comes back after the buyer sees the page?
- Their voice reaction, filed to the deal and tagged as a question, objection, buying signal, stakeholder mention, or action item. It is the buyer's real words, not just a form fill or a view.
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