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Jason Cyr, writing at The Human in the Loop, starts with the AI-design conversation’s taste claim and points to the work teams need before agents start producing anything:

There’s a popular narrative that design’s value in the age of AI is taste — the human eye that says “not that, this.” I think that undersells us. Taste matters. But what organizations actually need from design right now is clarity. The ability to wade through ambiguity, make invisible systems legible, and give teams something they can act on. That’s always been the real (often under-appreciated) superpower, and AI just made it an urgent need.

Cyr’s earlier piece on agentic-era design teams covered the move from making outputs to directing work. Here, he describes the coordination layer that had been hiding inside the old process:

The old product development process had shock absorbers we never realized. Meetings where people quietly aligned on things that were never written down. Hallway conversations that resolved ambiguity nobody had formally surfaced. Design reviews that were really translation sessions — designers decoding what product actually meant, engineers decoding what designers actually intended. PMs who held critical context in their heads and dispensed it as needed.

None of this was in any process document. It was human labour — invisible, unacknowledged — absorbing the ambiguity that the formal process couldn’t handle.

We called it process, but it was actually a buffer.

Cyr puts that clarity work inside design leadership:

Here’s the thing about this problem: it’s not a tooling gap. It’s not a project management gap. It’s a clarity gap.

Design earns its seat at the table when it moves beyond artifacts and starts shaping how a product organization delivers work. Not just the screens. Not just the system. The operating model itself — who decides what, when something is ready, how context travels, and what “good enough” means at each stage.

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