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Despite GPT Image 2's power, its adoption by professionals in fields like design or marketing is not guaranteed. Experts may be unwilling to trade the fine-grained control of existing tools for AI's speed. The primary value unlock may be empowering non-experts to create high-quality assets, suggesting that AI's initial impact is often democratization rather than immediate replacement of expert roles.
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 doesn't replace creative experts; it elevates their role. Their craft shifts from manually creating individual assets to designing and building robust, reusable AI systems that empower the entire organization to generate on-brand content.
According to Moda's founder, the most impactful AI tools are not those that merely accelerate existing workflows. Instead, they are the ones that empower users to achieve outcomes that were previously beyond their skill set, truly unlocking new creative capabilities for non-experts.
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.
As AI democratizes the technical aspects of content creation, the ability to guide it with unique perspective, craft, and taste becomes the key differentiator. AI is a powerful tool for experts to scale their vision, but it cannot replace the vision itself.
A new technology's adoption depends on its fit with a profession's core tasks. Spreadsheets were an immediate revolution for accountants but a minor tool for lawyers. Similarly, generative AI is transformative for coders and marketers but struggles to find a daily use case in many other professions.
AI's most significant impact isn't replacing the design process but empowering designers to build their own bespoke tools. This removes technological limitations, allowing creatives to build exactly what they envision without being constrained by existing off-the-shelf software.
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.
Google's Nano Banana Pro is so powerful in generating high-quality visuals, infographics, and cinematic images that companies can achieve better design output with fewer designers. This pressures creative professionals to become expert AI tool operators rather than just creators.
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.