(Second link to Chad Johnson this week, but I just discovered his Substack, so ¯\_(ツ)_/¯.)
Chad Johnson, writing in his newsletter, argues that designer influence in product decisions comes from something other than craft output. He lays out the underlying dynamic:
Roadmaps are shaped less by who has the best ideas and more by who controls the framing of tradeoffs. Every roadmap decision is a bet: build this instead of that, now instead of later, for these users instead of those. Whoever makes the risk feel smaller tends to win.
So where does the designer fit? Johnson:
The most influential designers at startups do not position themselves as makers of screens. They act as orientation devices for the team. Orientation is the ability to help a group understand where they are, what matters, and what tradeoffs are real. It precedes prioritization, and it makes decision-making possible.
A designer whose output stops at screens is working on the wrong layer of the problem. Johnson lists the skills that back the orientation role:
Designers who shape direction invest in strategic framing, business literacy, and narrative construction. They learn to say no with evidence and to disagree without drama.
Johnson’s list is right as far as it goes. He understates one skill: legibility. A lot of design influence breaks down at translation. The thinking is strategic; the communication stays in design vocabulary. A sharp problem statement understandable only to other designers stays in the design review. Designers who change the conversation make their analysis readable in product and business terms without flattening it. That’s the same move Johnson gestures at when he describes “decision-ready artifacts” as “tools for comparison… designed to provoke judgment, not admiration.”
Johnson’s closer calls the future of design leadership “quieter, more rigorous, and deeply strategic.” That’s right. It’s also a role that depends on being read by the people making the call.

Why Most Designers Will Never Influence Product Roadmaps
A practical explanation of how roadmap decisions are really made, and how designers can gain influence




















