Tutorials
Tutorial: White-Label Your CONTENTFORGER Output for Agency Clients
Strip CONTENTFORGER branding, inject client branding, ship code that looks like yours. Agency tier only.
By Øyvind — 2026-04-03, last updated 2026-04-03
Agency tier on CONTENTFORGER includes white-label output. Here is how to actually use it for client work.
Before you start
You need CONTENTFORGER Agency ($99/mo). White-label is not available on Free or Pro.
Have your client's brand assets ready: - Logo (SVG or PNG). - Primary brand colour. - Brand name.
Step one: set your agency profile
In CONTENTFORGER, navigate to Settings then White Label.
Upload your agency logo. Set your agency brand name. Set your agency primary colour.
This becomes the default branding on all your generated code. You are essentially saying, by default, strip CONTENTFORGER branding and use my agency branding.
Step two: create a client
Go to Agency then Clients. Click Add Client.
Fill in: - Client name. - Client email. - Company name. - Client logo URL (the client's logo, not yours). - Client primary colour.
Save. You now have a client profile.
Step three: generate code for this client
When starting a new generation, there is a dropdown labeled Branding.
Select the client profile you just created.
Prompt as normal. The generated output will use the client's brand instead of yours or CONTENTFORGER's.
Step four: what actually gets branded
The generated code includes the client's brand in: - The footer of every page. - The default logo component. - The default primary colour in the Tailwind config. - The OpenGraph image template. - The favicon placeholder. - The README title and description.
The code itself is clean. No "Made with CONTENTFORGER" watermarks. No tracking pixels phoning home to NorwegianSpark.
Step five: deliver to the client
Download the ZIP. The code is ready to hand over.
In the client call: - Walk them through the README. - Explain where to update environment variables. - Show them how to deploy (Vercel is easiest for most clients). - Offer optional ongoing maintenance if that is part of your package.
The client has no way to tell the code was generated by CONTENTFORGER unless you tell them. It looks like custom work because, for their purposes, it is.
Step six: maintaining multiple clients
The Client Dashboard shows all your client projects in one view.
Columns: client name, project count, last generation date, current plan status.
Click into any client to see their projects, usage, and billing status.
For agency workflows with five or more clients, this dashboard pays for the Agency tier on its own. You do not need to maintain a spreadsheet of which project belongs to which client.
The legal and ethical note
White-label does not mean hiding from the client that you used AI to generate code. Be honest if asked.
What white-label means is that the output does not carry CONTENTFORGER branding. The client gets code that is yours to deliver under whatever arrangement you have with them.
Most agency clients do not ask how the code was produced. They care about the deliverable. If they ask, tell them the truth.
Pricing the work
A common question: if generation takes minutes and white-label strips the brand, what do you charge the client?
The work you charge for is not the generation. It is: - Understanding their requirements (hours of discovery). - Prompting correctly to match their needs. - Reviewing the output for quality. - Customising after generation to fit specific needs. - Deploying and handing over. - Ongoing support and maintenance.
Generation is one step in a larger engagement. Charge for the engagement, not the generation.
Typical agency projects using CONTENTFORGER land between five thousand and twenty thousand per project depending on scope. CONTENTFORGER reduces your build time from weeks to days. The savings go to your margin, not the client's bill.
What not to do
Do not advertise that you use CONTENTFORGER. That is fine for them to know if they ask, but proactively telling them undermines your value prop.
Do not deliver raw CONTENTFORGER output without review. The generator is excellent but not infallible. Ten to twenty percent of outputs need human cleanup before they are client-ready. Catch that before delivery.
Do not use white-label to pass off genuinely bad work as yours. Review carefully. Reputation matters more than the short-term margin.