With AI, anyone on a team can generate mockups in minutes. That was never the hard part. The difficult work is, and always has been, maintaining coherency and intention across a product so it works for people, not the other way around. And perhaps unintuitively, everyone making mockups can help.
I was recently in a meeting discussing improvements to a specific part of a product. The backend engineer came in with a mockup. The product manager came in with a mockup. And the front end developer already had a working build. Three different disciplines all showing up with their version of what the UI could be, all enabled by AI tools. Given this reality, designers should worry about AI taking their jobs right? Well if the job is making mockups, then yes.
Here's what happened in that meeting. Seeing each person's concepts led me to ask the more important design questions. How do these features interact? What are the relationships between them? We discussed the system, its objects, and the mental model that made most sense for our target users.
We got to a shared understanding of the data we needed to support the UI, how it should be structured and how it interrelates with the rest of the product. Back-end, front-end, PM, and design on the same page. Which makes sense because these are the conversations that drive clarity and coherence in a product. Not "do you like this in my mockup or that in some other person's mockup?"
Later, I was reminded of a point I heard an educator make at the recent Design Futures Assembly. He noted at their business school, they'd give students case studies to analyze. Pretty much every student used AI to blast through the analysis in minutes. At first, the professors tried to stop students from using AI. But quickly they realized they should encourage it.
When all the students came in with the baseline analysis behind them, the conversation could progress to the next level. Before, it took the whole class hour just to get to the basic conclusions. Now, within ten minutes, they're on to much deeper and meatier topics. The majority of the class is spent expanding from the baseline as opposed to getting everybody there.
When everybody comes in with a baseline, we can skip past "here's my idea, here's my idea" and get straight to the meaty questions. The ones that rarely got discussed because we used to spend our time analyzing one person's mockups.
It's not that where things lay out on an application screen doesn't matter (it does). It's that the layout should stem from the underlying purpose of an application and how we represent the system that enables it to people.
The mockup was never the hard part. AI has made that abundantly clear.

