Wireframes are important for multiple reasons. One of them would be that they, the wireframes, focus on functionality, behavior, and priority of content. Once you have those things established, designing the product becomes a lot easier.

Another benefit of wireframes is that they give the client an overview of what their website, app, etc. will eventually look like. This way when you present the design you probably won’t hear questions like “Why is that button there?”. So wireframes will save time and, possibly, headaches. When I was helping some friends with their 2020 calendar website, wireframes were instrumental in organizing and structuring the content and user interface. This allowed me to finish the project on time and not go over the budget.

Below, I put together a list of wireframes made by some of the best UX designers, in the hope that they might inspire you, and, maybe that you could even learn a bit from them.

Wireframe for a landing page by ueno.

Ui Sketch by Anthony Lagoon from Underbelly

Neverbland Deliverable Deck by Filippo Chiumiento from NEVERBLAND

From wireframes to design by Cuberto

Apple Watch WIRE by buatoom from Omise

Simplified Checkout Process by Michael Pons from PG

SelfSurvey — Wire Frames 1.0 by Sergey Jani from LUFT

UX User Flows by Janna Lynn Hagan

close web by Eddie Lobanovskiy

Product Website Wireframes by Michael Pons from PG