Design at a higher altitude Higher Altitude
AI isn't replacing designers. It's promoting them. The question is whether you're ready for the new job description.
The question everyone is dancing around: if AI starts designing, what will Product and UX designers actually do?
We build AI tooling for a living. We've watched language models generate UI copy, Figma plugins auto-layout components, and diffusion models produce marketing assets that ship to production. So we have a stake in this question — and an answer we've come to believe.
Product and UX designers will design how AI decides.
“We are becoming programmers of protocols and curators of experiences.”
That reframe matters. It's not a demotion — it's a promotion with a new job description most designers haven't read yet.
The most powerful creative roles have always been curatorial
Film directors don't hold the camera. Architects don't lay the bricks. Editors don't write the words. They shape everything by deciding what stays. The output belongs to them even though their hands didn't make it — because their judgement did.
Design has always moved in this direction as it matures. Senior designers stopped drawing every screen years ago. They set systems. They write principles. They review and decide. AI just compressed the timeline on the next step of that evolution.
What we're actually curating
When you configure an AI feature in a product, you're making design decisions at every step — even if no tool records it as one. You decide:
- When the AI speaks and when it stays silent
- How it fails when it doesn't know the answer
- What it assumes about the person in front of it
- Where human judgment must stay in the loop
- What the system refuses to do, no matter what
These are design decisions. They have UX consequences. They encode values. They set expectations users will build their trust on. A designer who understands this is more valuable in an AI-native product org than one who can comp a beautiful screen in three hours.
Less
- Pixel precision
- Layout from scratch
- Manual iteration
More
- Prompt architecture
- System constraints
- Quality judgment at speed
You're not drawing the thing. You're defining the conditions under which the right thing emerges.
Not less design. Design at a higher altitude.
What this means for how we hire and how we work
At WebHouse we build AI tooling into production software — for clients and for ourselves. What we've found is that the most valuable design thinking happens furthest from the canvas. It's in the conversations about edge cases. About what the system should refuse. About how to communicate uncertainty without eroding trust.
These are not Figma questions. They're design questions. And the designers who will thrive are the ones who recognized that early enough to redefine what design means to them.
“The designers who will struggle are the ones who defined themselves by the making. The ones who will thrive defined themselves by the deciding.”
The question isn't whether AI will change design. It already has. The question is whether you defined yourself by what you made — or by the quality of what you decided. I believe de were destined for the latter. The question is whether you know it yet. I believe we were destined to become orchestrators and curators, it works perfectly fine for me.
Inspired by a slide series by @uxgoodies on Instagram. The framing is theirs. The conviction that it's already happening in production — that's ours.