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AI will transform design by supporting the two phases of the creative process. "Divergent" agents will generate a wide array of novel ideas on a canvas, breaking creative blocks. "Convergent" agents will then analyze, cluster, and help designers refine these options into a final product.

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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.

Standard AI coding tools force a linear A-to-B iteration process, which stifles the divergent thinking essential for design exploration. Tools with a 'canvas' feature allow designers to visualize, track, and branch off multiple design paths simultaneously, better mirroring the creative process.

Contrary to traditional digital design, the modern AI-assisted workflow involves broad, conceptual exploration on canvas-like tools (e.g., Paper) and sweating the final visual details directly in code. Pixel-nudging in design software like Figma is becoming obsolete for last-mile fit and finish.

AI tools democratize prototyping, but their true power is in rapidly exploring multiple ideas (divergence) and then testing and refining them (convergence). This dramatically accelerates the creative and validation process before significant engineering resources are committed.

AI's primary impact on design isn't just making it accessible. For experts, it's a tool to rapidly explore a vast space of creative possibilities. This allows them to sample far more options and apply their taste and intentionality to a much broader canvas than was previously possible.

Many aspiring creators quit because their creative taste exceeds their technical skill, causing frustration. Figma's CEO suggests AI's most exciting potential is bridging this gap. It allows creators to rapidly generate and sample the possibility space, helping them achieve their vision almost instantly and overcome the initial skill barrier that stifles creativity.

Figma's CEO believes AI will create the "10X designer." As AI automates basic design tasks, making "good enough" the new baseline, the premium on true craft and system-level thinking will skyrocket. Designers who can leverage AI to execute a holistic product vision will become indispensable leaders and key drivers of a company's success.

For creative work like design, AI's true value isn't just accelerating tasks. It's enabling designers to explore a much wider option space, test more possibilities, and apply more craft to the final choice. Since design is non-deterministic, AI serves creative exploration more than simple speed.

Dylan Field believes the design industry has settled into a visual rut, with most tech companies adopting similar aesthetics. He's hopeful that AI will usher in a 'Renaissance period' by dramatically lowering the barrier to creating diverse visual styles and interaction paradigms, leading to more interesting and expressive digital experiences.

AI tools can drastically increase the volume of initial creative explorations, moving from 3 directions to 10 or more. The designer's role then shifts from pure creation to expert curation, using their taste to edit AI outputs into winning concepts.

Figma Sees AI's Future in Design as Two Agent Types: Divergent and Convergent | RiffOn