Categories
Featured-Post-UX-Design (EN) UI/UX Design EN

The Evolution of Product Design in the AI Era: How to Orchestrate and Build for Sustainable Success

Auteur n°15 – David

By David Mendes
Views: 2

Summary – The rise of AI is disrupting product design: teams must blend automation and facilitation to meet speed expectations and strategic alignment. Between builder mode—quickly generating AI-driven prototypes and no-code wireframes—and orchestrator mode—focused on collaborative workshops and coherence across business, IT, and users—flexibility is crucial.
Solution: deploy a hybrid model, using builder mode for standardized deliverables and orchestrator mode for complex projects, while strengthening soft skills, scoping, and feedback for sustainable success.

In a context where AI is profoundly transforming design methodologies, product designers must rethink their approach to remain effective and create value. Between the execution speed enabled by intelligent tools and the need for strategic stakeholder orchestration, two working modes clearly emerge. The first, known as the “builder” mode, focuses on the rapid production of design artifacts with strong reliance on automation. The second, called the “orchestrator” mode, emphasizes soft skills and facilitation to align business teams, IT, and users around a shared vision. Mastering the switch between these modes is crucial for delivering sustainable digital products.

Builder Mode: AI-Augmented Rapid Execution

The builder mode relies on clear requirements to deliver design artifacts at high speed. It leverages AI to automate standardized tasks while preserving human finesse in aesthetic judgment.

Clarifying Requirements and Deploying AI

In builder mode, the first step is to precisely define functional objectives and technical constraints. User stories must be detailed enough for semantic generation algorithms to automatically propose layouts or initial prototypes.

AI then acts as an accelerator: generating wireframes, suggesting color palettes, or interface layouts. However, without rigorous framing, the output can drift from actual business needs or the brand’s visual consistency.

Collaboration between the designer and the product team remains essential to validate these automated deliverables. The designer refines the generated proposals, checks accessibility, and adjusts the visual hierarchy to ensure an optimal user experience.

No-Code Prototyping and Wireframing Tools

AI-enhanced no-code platforms enable the transformation of mockups into interactive prototypes in just a few clicks. UI components are automatically assembled according to the structure defined by the designer, reducing traditional production iterations.

These solutions often include reusable and adaptable component libraries, ensuring consistency across a product’s various screens. The designer configures these blocks to save time while maintaining visual identity control.

The leverage effect is particularly powerful for simple projects: landing pages, forms, or MVPs. Automating repetitive tasks frees time to focus on aesthetic evaluation and interaction relevance.

Concrete Example: Financial Services SME

A mid-sized financial services company adopted an AI-enhanced no-code platform to quickly create the homepage of its new client portal. The brief was clear: promote a new service, integrate a video, and offer a streamlined registration area.

In less than two days, the designer generated several optimized wireframe versions and then selected the most relevant graphical combination. The interactive prototype was validated internally before deployment.

This project demonstrated that builder mode, supported by AI, can reduce the standard design time for routine deliverables by over 70% while maintaining high visual and ergonomic quality.

Orchestrator Mode: Facilitation and Strategic Alignment

Orchestrator mode demands fine-tuned management of stakeholder interactions and a shared product vision. It values communication, negotiation, and facilitation skills to unite digital and business teams.

Stakeholder Management and Communication

In this mode, the designer acts as a pivot between IT teams, business units, and end users. They gather everyone’s expectations and translate them into design objectives that are understandable by all.

The ability to contextualize technical, marketing, and business challenges is crucial to avoid misunderstandings and late-stage adjustments. The designer-orchestrator anticipates friction points and proposes balanced trade-offs.

This approach fosters trust and buy-in, minimizing backtracking and optimizing the product roadmap. It relies on transparent communication and clear visual summaries.

Collaborative Sessions and Shared Vision

Co-creation workshops, whether in-person or virtual, are at the heart of orchestrator mode. The designer facilitates these sessions to elicit a common vision, align priorities, and identify potential risks.

Methods like design sprints or experience mapping workshops help structure discussions and make the hierarchy of features and user journeys visible.

At the end of these workshops, a prioritized backlog and a clear roadmap allow each stakeholder to understand the impact, timeline, and resources required for each project phase.

Concrete Example: Public Sector Organization

A public entity responsible for online training services engaged a designer-orchestrator to conduct a workshop that brought together educational experts, IT professionals, and learner representatives.

Over two days of collaborative sessions, the team mapped the user journey, identified pain points, and reached consensus on the key features of the future portal.

This process showed that investing time in facilitation can anticipate over 80% of future adjustments, significantly reducing prototype revisions and speeding up the subsequent development phase.

Edana: strategic digital partner in Switzerland

We support companies and organizations in their digital transformation

Alternating Builder and Orchestrator Modes

Alternating between builder and orchestrator modes allows the design posture to adapt to project complexity. It fosters sustainable innovation by balancing execution speed with strategic coherence.

Criteria for Choosing the Right Mode

The first criterion is the project’s maturity level: an MVP or conversion page often fits within builder mode, whereas a full redesign or complex ecosystem calls for an orchestrator approach.

Next, the diversity and number of stakeholders influence the posture: the more varied the participants, the more critical the facilitation dimension becomes to ensure mutual understanding.

Finally, strategic and regulatory considerations may require fine orchestration, particularly when aligning security policies, accessibility standards, or governance constraints across different business units.

Developing Cross-Functional Skills

To switch modes effectively, designers must enrich their soft-skill toolkit: active listening, negotiation, teaching, and situational leadership. These skills complement technical and aesthetic expertise.

Regular practice of workshops, training in facilitation techniques, and feedback loops help reinforce confidence and establish the designer’s legitimacy as an arbitrator.

Adopting a feedback culture within teams is also essential to measure the impact of both modes and adjust the design strategy based on user feedback and performance indicators.

Concrete Example: Research Institution

A research and innovation institution used builder mode to prototype a project-tracking dashboard, then switched to orchestrator mode to roll out a multi-stakeholder collaborative platform.

The initial prototype was generated in a few days using an AI tool and validated by a pilot group. Then the team held a series of workshops to align researchers, IT managers, and external partners.

This hybrid strategy demonstrated the effectiveness of alternating modes: rapid functional validation and lasting adoption thanks to collective buy-in from the design phase.

Hybrid Model for Product Design

Builder mode offers accelerated delivery for standard deliverables, while orchestrator mode ensures strategic coherence and stakeholder buy-in. Combining these two approaches according to context optimizes time-to-market, quality, and the longevity of digital products.

By developing technical, aesthetic, and interpersonal skills, designers become facilitators capable of steering projects from end to end, aligning user needs with business goals.

Our experts are by your side to support you in this transition and implement a flexible, collaborative, and AI-resilient product design model.

Discuss your challenges with an Edana expert

By David

UX/UI Designer

PUBLISHED BY

David Mendes

Avatar de David Mendes

David is a Senior UX/UI Designer. He crafts user-centered journeys and interfaces for your business software, SaaS products, mobile applications, websites, and digital ecosystems. Leveraging user research and rapid prototyping expertise, he ensures a cohesive, engaging experience across every touchpoint.

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions on Product Design in the AI Era

How do you choose between the builder and orchestrator modes for an AI project?

It depends on the project's maturity level and complexity. Builder mode is ideal for standardized deliverables or an MVP, enabling rapid execution via AI. The orchestrator approach suits complex ecosystems: it focuses on facilitation and aligning stakeholders to ensure strategic coherence and minimize backtracking.

Which AI-powered no-code tools should you use to rapidly prototype an MVP?

To speed up prototyping, favor AI-enhanced no-code platforms like Uizard, Bravo Studio, or open-source Figma plugins. They offer adaptable component libraries and automatic wireframe generation. However, make sure to choose modular, secure solutions that are compatible with your stack to facilitate future iterations and custom integration.

How do you ensure brand consistency when automating wireframes?

Implement a centralized design system with tokens and clear guidelines. Before automation, define color palettes, typography, and ergonomic principles. The designer then reviews each AI-generated proposal, adjusts components, and verifies accessibility. This two-step process ensures visual consistency while leveraging the speed of automation.

What maturity criteria should guide the use of builder mode?

Projects requiring high speed, with simple functional objectives and clearly defined expectations, are suitable for builder mode. It excels for an MVP, a landing page, or a limited feature. However, if the scope expands or many stakeholders are involved, you should switch to orchestrator mode for greater flexibility and governance.

How can you engage stakeholders for effective orchestrated design?

Organize collaborative workshops (design sprints, experience mapping) to bring together business teams, IT, and users. The designer facilitates discussions, maps user journeys, and prioritizes the backlog. This approach promotes transparency and buy-in, anticipates friction points, and validates strategic decisions before development.

Which cross-functional skills should you develop to alternate between these two modes?

Besides mastering AI tools, develop active listening, negotiation, and facilitation skills. Train in workshop techniques and conflict management. Situational leadership enables you to shift from an executor role to a facilitator role depending on project needs and to build trust with all stakeholders.

Which KPIs should you track to measure the success of AI product design?

Key indicators include time-to-market, user adoption rate, Net Promoter Score (NPS), number of iterations rejected during testing, and impact on ROI. These metrics provide a comprehensive view of your design's effectiveness, whether executed in builder or orchestrator mode.

What mistakes should you avoid when integrating AI into product design?

Avoid a lack of initial framework, blind reliance on AI without human validation, and neglecting accessibility testing. Do not overlook team communication and documentation. Finally, do not underestimate user feedback; adjust your prototypes to ensure an optimal experience.

CONTACT US

They trust us

Let’s talk about you

Describe your project to us, and one of our experts will get back to you.

SUBSCRIBE

Don’t miss our strategists’ advice

Get our insights, the latest digital strategies and best practices in digital transformation, innovation, technology and cybersecurity.

Let’s turn your challenges into opportunities

Based in Geneva, Edana designs tailor-made digital solutions for companies and organizations seeking greater competitiveness.

We combine strategy, consulting, and technological excellence to transform your business processes, customer experience, and performance.

Let’s discuss your strategic challenges.

022 596 73 70

Agence Digitale Edana sur LinkedInAgence Digitale Edana sur InstagramAgence Digitale Edana sur Facebook