Finsweet Client First brings a battle-tested naming convention and class structure system to Webflow, helping teams build scalable, maintainable websites with consistent styling across every page.
Designed specifically for Webflow's visual development environment, Client First provides a comprehensive style guide cloneable that establishes a standardized approach to class naming, component architecture, and global styles. Instead of creating ad-hoc class names that become difficult to manage as projects grow, developers can follow Client First's logical naming patterns (like padding-global, container-large, or text_color-brand) to keep their projects organized and collaborative. This is especially valuable when multiple team members work on the same site, when handing off projects to clients who want to make their own updates, or when returning to a project months later—the predictable structure makes navigation and editing significantly faster.
Unlike generic CSS frameworks, Client First is purpose-built for Webflow's class-based system and doesn't require custom code or external dependencies. The cloneable includes pre-configured global classes, spacing systems, typography scales, and color variables that serve as a solid foundation for any project.
Ideal for agencies managing multiple client sites, freelancers building long-term maintainable projects, and development teams seeking a shared design system standard.
```Clone the Finsweet Client First style guide to your Webflow account, then use it as a starting template or reference. The system provides a naming convention, folder structure, and global classes that establish scalable, maintainable Webflow projects following industry best practices.
Client First creates consistent, scalable Webflow projects that are easier to maintain and hand off to clients or team members. The standardized naming convention reduces confusion, improves collaboration, and makes sites more manageable as they grow. It's become an industry standard for professional Webflow development.
Build organized, scalable Webflow sites with consistent class naming, create maintainable design systems, improve team collaboration with standardized conventions, make client handoffs smoother, reduce technical debt, and establish professional workflows that scale across multiple projects and team members.
No, Client First is optional but highly recommended for professional Webflow development. While you can use any naming system, Client First provides battle-tested conventions that solve common problems. Many agencies and freelancers adopt it because it improves project quality and maintainability.
Webflow Developer, UK
I love to solve problems for start-ups & companies through great low-code webflow design & development. 🎉

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