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Would UX Design Be Automated? – A 7-Figure Designer’s Perspective

The ‘Generative AI’ wave has disrupted industries at breakneck speed in recent years – including the UI/UX design space. Since 2020, AI adoption among designers has surged from just 15% to a projected 75% in 2025, fundamentally changing how we design digital experiences. 

Design tools now generate wireframes in seconds, analyze user feedback with 70-90% better efficiency, and prototype interfaces in less than half the time previously required. 

With such rapid evolution, there’s one question that often keeps popping up in conversations with fellow designers and clients: “Will UX design be automated?” 

The short answer is – no. While AI accelerates repetitive tasks, it cannot yet replace human judgement, creativity or empathy – paving the way for forward thinking teams, such as the one at my agency – Bricx to pair AI with human input and create faster, smarter and more thoughtful design processes. 

This article will explore what’s possible with AI in UX, what will remain human and how product folks can ready themselves for the inevitable. 

So let’s dive right in. 

Current State of UX Automation – What’s the Scenario?

The likes of Figma & Sketch have already started adding elements of artificial intelligence into their processes & workflows. 

These features help designers automate specific tasks which would otherwise take hours to execute, including: 

The likes of ChatGPT, Claude & Midjourney are also being used to create content & generate design ideas. 

That being said, a majority of UX professionals have indicated that while automation has streamlined parts of their process, AI is far off from replacing their jobs entirely. 

Research supports it too, with a recent survey by Adobe revealing: 

About 70% UX designers believe that automation tools save them time on repetitive tasks, allowing better focus towards more creative aspects. 

It’s clear: While advancements in AI have helped save time & improve productivity, they still require human oversight to ensure the final product meets the user’s needs. 

For the time being, these tools won’t replace the need for human creativity & thinking – they’ll rather enhance it. 

What Tasks Can Be Automated with AI in UX Design?

Several repetitive tasks under UI/UX design can be efficiently automated using AI, freeing designers to focus on more strategic output. 

Some of these include: 

This acceleration is particularly valuable for projects requiring frequent iterations.

 

What UX Automation Won’t Do? – A Closer Look 

Imagine an AI tool generating a dashboard prototype for a SaaS product: it produces a clean layout with default charts, buttons, and navigation. Functionally, it’s fine, and the team saves hours.

But when the dashboard needs insight prioritization, highlighting the most critical metrics, or microcopy that guides users with empathy, AI falls short. 

This is where human involvement comes in – with the designer helping improve visual hierarchy, tweaking labels for clarity and ensuring the dashboard reduces cognitive load; all of which directly influences usability & conversions.

Given that, here are the key aspects of UX design that AI won’t be able to replace (as of now):

  1. Understanding emotional context and user motivations

AI tools can analyze click patterns, scroll behavior, or engagement metrics, but they cannot fully interpret the emotional context behind user actions. 

For example, a drop-off in a signup flow could mean confusion, frustration, or simply a user being distracted, but AI can only detect the “what,” not the “why.”

According to the Nielsen Norman Group, emotional design directly influences user satisfaction, trust, and retention. 

Human designers can empathize with users, identify pain points, and design experiences that resonate emotionally – something AI still struggles to replicate. 

    2.Solving complex multi-step UX problems

Designing multi-step flows, like onboarding a SaaS platform or configuring a complex dashboard, requires contextual thinking and decision-making across multiple touchpoints. 

AI may generate functional layouts, but it often lacks the ability to evaluate the end-to-end user journey, anticipate friction points, or prioritize tasks based on user goals.

As per David Truog, VP & Principal Analyst at Forrester Research –  AI currently excels at supporting discrete tasks, but human designers will remain essential to holistic problem-solving and strategic UX decisions. 

 

    3.Maintaining brand tone and human-centered empathy
 

While AI can replicate color schemes or layouts, it cannot understand a brand’s “voice” or nuanced user sentiment.

Subtlety in UX, like microcopy phrasing or emotion-driven UI decisions, require empathy for the target audience, alongside cultural sensitivity and alignment with business values.
These aspects are also crucial in establishing a brand’s personality & trustworthiness, and hence, require different levels of human involvement to make things work better.

To sum it up, while AI is crucial for efficiency, speed and consistency, elements like intuition, emotional intelligence & context-aware decision making are uniquely human capabilities. 

Designers who understand these boundaries can leverage AI where it helps most, while still retaining control over the strategic and empathetic aspects of UX.

 

Skills Designers Will Need in an AI-Assisted UX World

As AI becomes a core part of UX workflows, designers aren’t just expected to “use the tools” —  they’ll also need strategic, interpretive, and adaptive skills that allow them to collaborate effectively with AI while keeping designs human-centered.

By developing these skills, designers can leverage AI as an augmentation tool rather than a replacement, allowing teams to scale without losing creativity, empathy, or strategic insight.

How to Structure Your Design Team for an AI-first Future?  

Now, while designers will need to upskill themselves for AI, it’s crucial for decision-makers to also make decisions that actually bring in the best of both human skill and the evolving technology landscape. 

The real question, especially for decision makers then, wouldn’t be: “What can AI help me do?”, but rather around how they can organize their design team and processes around effectively leveraging AI in their workflow. 

Here’s some actionable tips to help you structure your UX team for an AI-first future:

While AI can accelerate outputs, humans interpret the meaning behind the results.

In practice, teams that structure their workflows around human-AI collaboration will see faster iterations, better insight synthesis, and more time for creativity and innovation, without losing the empathy-driven essence of UX design. 

 

Conclusion 

Looking ahead, UX teams that embrace AI intelligently will thrive. Product leaders will need to structure teams and create workflows that  combine both human creativity and AI efficiency, building true resilience against the rapidly evolving technological landscape. 

A smart approach could also involve partnering with design studios or agencies that understand AI-first workflows – teams that will act as an extended arm, supporting internal UX teams with both human expertise and AI-augmented capabilities. 

Author bio: 

Siddharth is the CEO at Bricx, where he leads the design function for the company. With nearly a decade in design and SaaS, he has worked with various B2B startups to help them grow using high-conversion websites & product design. You can connect with him on LinkedIn and Twitter.

 

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