We scan new podcasts and send you the top 5 insights daily.
AI lowers the technical barrier to building products, making design taste and judgment the critical differentiators. An AI can execute tasks, but it requires a designer's discerning eye to guide it toward a high-quality, cohesive, and valuable user experience.
AI won't replace designers because it lacks taste and subjective opinion. Instead, as AI gets better at generating highly opinionated (though not perfect) designs, it will serve as a powerful exploration tool. This plants more flags in the option space, allowing human designers to react, curate, and push the most promising directions further, amplifying their strategic role.
AI tools are commoditizing the act of writing code (software development). The durable skill and key differentiator is now software engineering: architecting systems, creating great user experiences, and applying taste. Building something people want to use is the new challenge.
As AI automates baseline design and coding work to a "7 out of 10" quality, the designer's role shifts. Instead of only executing craft, their unique value lies in applying deep "care" and intention to the user experience, focusing on the thoughtful details that AI misses.
As AI makes software creation faster and cheaper, the market will flood with products. In this environment of abundance, a strong brand, point of view, taste, and high-quality design become the most critical factors for a product to stand out and win customers.
AI tools are dramatically lowering the cost of implementation and "rote building." The value shifts, making the most expensive and critical part of product creation the design phase: deeply understanding the user pain point, exercising good judgment, and having product taste.
Contrary to the belief that AI leads to a loss of creative control, designers can achieve their exact vision by giving specific, detailed instructions. The AI acts as a hyper-competent collaborator, not an autonomous creator, allowing for meticulous refinement of the final product.
As AI commoditizes the 'how' of building products, the most critical human skills become the 'what' and 'why.' Product sense (knowing ingredients for a great product) and product taste (discerning what’s missing) will become far more valuable than process management.
Since AI can handle much of the executional design work, a designer's value shifts. Core skills are now product thinking, scrappy research, and brand taste to create products that are differentiated and emotionally resonant, not just functional.
As AI enables anyone to generate software and designs, the value of a designer shifts. Instead of being the sole creator, their role becomes more about editing, curating, and directing the output, ensuring the final product is well-crafted and solves the right problem.
AI coding tools generate functional but often generic designs. The key to creating a beautiful, personalized application is for the human to act as a creative director. This involves rejecting default outputs, finding specific aesthetic inspirations, and guiding the AI to implement a curated human vision.