The conversation about artificial intelligence and design tends to fall into two extremes: those who believe AI is about to replace designers any minute now, and those who dismiss it as a passing fad. The reality, as is often the case, lies in the middle. AI is an extraordinary tool that amplifies a design team's capacity, but it doesn't replace the skills that make design actually work.
What artificial intelligence does well
There are areas where AI brings concrete, measurable value to the design process. Ignoring them would be as irresponsible as overestimating them.
Generating variations. When you need to explore multiple visual directions quickly, AI can generate dozens of options in minutes. This is especially useful in the early stages of a project, where the speed of exploration matters more than precision. A designer can take those variations as a starting point and refine them with human judgment.
Speeding up ideation. AI is excellent at breaking creative blocks. When a team is stuck, generating visual references, color combinations or alternative layouts can unlock the process in minutes. It doesn't replace strategic ideation, but it complements it.
Repetitive tasks. Resizing assets for multiple platforms, generating variations of the same component, adapting copy to different formats. These tasks consume hours of work that AI can resolve in seconds, freeing the team to focus on higher-impact decisions.
Rapid prototyping. Tools that generate interfaces from text descriptions make it possible to create functional prototypes in a fraction of the time. This doesn't replace detailed design, but it speeds up the early validation stages.
What AI can't do
This is where the conversation gets interesting. Because AI's limitations in design aren't technical: they're conceptual. And they won't be solved with more training data or bigger models.
Strategic thinking. AI doesn't understand why a business needs to position itself in the market in a particular way. It can't assess whether a design decision is consistent with a company's commercial strategy. It doesn't know that your competitor just launched a redesign and that you need to differentiate yourself, not look like them. Strategic design requires business context that no model possesses.
Understanding human context. An experienced designer knows that the button to cancel a health services subscription needs a different tone than the one to cancel a food order. They understand that certain colors carry specific cultural connotations in different markets. They sense that a frustrated user needs a different experience than an enthusiastic one. AI processes patterns; it doesn't understand emotions.
Genuine empathy with the user. Designing for real people requires understanding their fears, frustrations, aspirations and limitations. A designer who has run user interviews, who has observed how people interact with a product, who has understood why they abandon a flow at a certain step, has knowledge that can't be replicated with training data. Empathy is experiential, not statistical.
Editorial and brand judgment. AI can generate something visually correct but completely off-tone for a brand. It can propose a solution that works technically but contradicts the company's values. Editorial judgment, the ability to say "this doesn't represent us", is inherently human.
The risk of automated mediocrity
There's a real danger that rarely gets discussed: AI tends to produce average results. It trains on millions of examples and generates outputs that represent the statistical center of what already exists. The result is competent but generic. Functional but forgettable.
For projects where differentiation is key, where the brand needs to stand out rather than blend in, relying exclusively on AI is a recipe for mediocrity. The most memorable designs in history didn't come from averaging what already existed, but from breaking with the established. And breaking requires intention, vision and courage, three things algorithms don't possess.
How we use AI at Tesler
At Tesler we embrace AI for what it is: a powerful tool in the service of a human process. We use it to speed up visual exploration in the early stages, to generate component variations, to optimize assets, and to automate tasks that don't require strategic judgment.
But the fundamental decisions, what to design, for whom, with what goal, with what tone, are always made by a human team that understands the client's business, that has talked to their users, and that has the experience to tell the difference between what works and what simply looks good.
It's not about choosing between AI and designers. It's about understanding that the best combination is a human team with strategic judgment that uses AI to amplify its execution capacity. Technology accelerates; people lead.
The future: collaboration, not competition
The coming years will redefine the designer's role, not eliminate it. Professionals who learn to use AI as an extension of their capability will be exponentially more productive. Those who ignore it will lose competitiveness. And those who delegate everything to it will produce work indistinguishable from the rest.
The competitive advantage in design always was, and will remain, original thinking, the ability to understand complex problems and translate them into simple experiences. AI doesn't change that equation. It only changes the speed at which we can execute once the strategy is clear.
"Creativity is intelligence having fun."
— Albert Einstein