---
title: "Artifacts"
description: "The documents webmoz produces for you at each task - and what to do with them."
category: "features"
order: 2
---

# Artifacts

Every time you complete a task, webmoz produces a document called an artifact.

These aren't templates. They're fully written, research-backed documents built around your specific venture - a customer profile with real demographic and behavioral detail, a competitor breakdown with actual market data, a brand voice guide with before/after examples.

By the end of the first three pillars, you'll have more than 25 of them - and they combine into your final build spec.

## What they look like

Each artifact is a structured document. Most have a short summary and a full version.

Some examples:

- A **customer profile** that reads like a detailed brief: "30–45 year old operations managers at manufacturing companies. They're responsible for supplier relationships but have no central system - everything lives in email and spreadsheets. Their biggest frustration is time spent on manual follow-up."

- A **positioning statement** you can drop directly onto a landing page: "For ops teams at growing manufacturers who've outgrown spreadsheets, [Name] is the supplier management tool that replaces manual tracking with a clear, auditable workflow."

- A **site architecture plan** that maps every page, who it's for, and how users get between them.

## How to work with them

When you open a task, webmoz may ask a few questions. Answer them and the agent uses its tools to draft the artifact.

From the draft view you can:

- **Refine** - Tell webmoz what to change. "This customer profile is too broad - narrow it to freelancers, not agencies." "Add a section on pricing objections." It revises and you review again.
- **Approve** - Accept the artifact and move to the next task.
- **Attach a file** - Upload existing research, a competitor's pricing page, your own notes, or a brand reference. webmoz will use it.

## Changing an artifact after approval

You can go back and update any artifact at any time.

Open it from the Library, click Refine, and tell webmoz what changed. Maybe you shifted your target market, raised your price point, or decided to go B2B instead of B2C. Update the relevant artifact and all later tasks that reference it will reflect the new direction.

## Pushing to Notion

If you've connected Notion, you can push any artifact to your workspace with one click.

This is useful for sharing with collaborators, organizing work alongside other projects, or keeping a copy outside webmoz.

## Using files to improve results

Attaching files is one of the fastest ways to get better output.

If you have a competitor's pricing page, a customer interview transcript, a visual brand reference, or your own rough notes - attach them. webmoz will incorporate what's relevant and produce a more specific, more useful artifact.
