Phil Morton, who writes about product design, research, and AI, argues that design teams can’t adopt AI one designer at a time. The process only changes when design and engineering change it together:
New ways of working mean that designers and engineers have to work closely together. The ideal is that you’re in the same code repository as the engineers, not throwing a Figma file over the wall.
For most teams that’s a long way from today. Designers and developers might sit in the same squad, but they’re still siloed, with a big handover in the middle.
So when you’re trying to work out what your AI design process is going to look like, you’re not just choosing new tools for yourself. Your engineering partners have to adopt the same approach, because it makes no sense for you to work one way and them another.
The handoff is the stubborn part. A designer can learn Claude Code and still end up handing a different artifact across the same organizational boundary. Without a shared repository, components, and review process, the team has improved one person’s output while leaving the production system alone. Tool fluency helps, but it doesn’t create a shared way of working.
Morton also shows why there can’t be one standard AI workflow for every design project:
In the old way of working, the output was roughly the same whatever the project: a high-fidelity Figma file.
Now it varies wildly. If you’re assembling a feature on an established product with a mature design system, you barely need Figma at all. AI is good at using existing components and you’re not asking it to do any visual design, which it’s bad at. You can sketch the rough idea, have it assemble it and iterate. There’s little point building a pixel-perfect version by hand first.
But if you’re working on a new product which needs its own visual design or brand, it’s a different job. AI can get to a rough wireframe using generic components, then it stalls. Creative and original visual design still needs a human.

Five reasons design teams are struggling to adopt AI
Design teams can’t adopt AI one designer at a time. The process only changes when design and engineering change it together, sharing a repository instead of a handoff.






















