This week, according to my Instagram feed, I was killed by AI approximately 1,500 times.
"Designers are done." "Graphic design is over." "We are SO cooked." Post. Post. Post. Same words, different face, repeat until Thursday.
And then — same people, same scroll — "Type this exact prompt and make $400 this week." Woooohooo! Someone claps. Someone shares it. Someone reposts it to their 200 followers. The cycle is complete.
I've been a graphic designer and retail designer for fifteen years. We've survived desktop publishing, stock photography, Canva, and every other thing that was supposedly going to kill us. Each time, the death announcement came first. Then the hot takes. Then the quiet.
But here's what's actually bothering me this week — more than the fear, more than the hype: we all said the same thing. Every single one of us. The same words, the same panic, the same conclusion, within 48 hours of each other. Thousands of designers. People who chose this profession partly because they see the world differently. And we looked at a new tool and produced... identical reactions.
That's the part I can't stop thinking about.
Also the money posts. Why do the "$400 in two days!" announcements feel so loud? I keep noticing that wealthy people don't post daily earnings. Nobody who actually built something substantial is announcing it in real time. What's happening in those posts isn't really about money. It's about proof — proof that you adapted, proof that you didn't get left behind, proof that you're one of the smart ones. I understand the feeling. I've felt it. But it's not a business strategy. It's anxiety wearing a caption.
Here's my actual take, as someone using AI daily and watching it change my process in real ways: it doesn't replace the things that make a senior designer valuable. It replaces execution that was already thin. Work that was mostly template, mostly formula, mostly "I can figure this out in Canva." That work was always fragile. AI didn't kill it — it just moved up the timeline.
What AI can't do is the thing that took fifteen years to build. The look at something and knowing. The moment a client loves a concept and you stay quiet because you already see the problem they haven't found yet. That doesn't live in a prompt.
So yes — AI is real, the shift is real, I'm not pretending any of this is nothing. But I'm also not going to announce my death on the internet every time something new appears.
I'll leave that to everyone else. There seem to be plenty of volunteers.
If you're a designer sitting with this — not panicking, not hustling, just actually trying to figure it out — that's the more honest place to be. That's where I am too.
Still thinking,
Sanaz
Founder — SketchUp for Graphic Designers
p.s. I Asked an AI to Think With Me. It Works Differently Than I Expected.
"Designers are done." "Graphic design is over." "We are SO cooked." Post. Post. Post. Same words, different face, repeat until Thursday.
And then — same people, same scroll — "Type this exact prompt and make $400 this week." Woooohooo! Someone claps. Someone shares it. Someone reposts it to their 200 followers. The cycle is complete.
I've been a graphic designer and retail designer for fifteen years. We've survived desktop publishing, stock photography, Canva, and every other thing that was supposedly going to kill us. Each time, the death announcement came first. Then the hot takes. Then the quiet.
But here's what's actually bothering me this week — more than the fear, more than the hype: we all said the same thing. Every single one of us. The same words, the same panic, the same conclusion, within 48 hours of each other. Thousands of designers. People who chose this profession partly because they see the world differently. And we looked at a new tool and produced... identical reactions.
That's the part I can't stop thinking about.
Also the money posts. Why do the "$400 in two days!" announcements feel so loud? I keep noticing that wealthy people don't post daily earnings. Nobody who actually built something substantial is announcing it in real time. What's happening in those posts isn't really about money. It's about proof — proof that you adapted, proof that you didn't get left behind, proof that you're one of the smart ones. I understand the feeling. I've felt it. But it's not a business strategy. It's anxiety wearing a caption.
Here's my actual take, as someone using AI daily and watching it change my process in real ways: it doesn't replace the things that make a senior designer valuable. It replaces execution that was already thin. Work that was mostly template, mostly formula, mostly "I can figure this out in Canva." That work was always fragile. AI didn't kill it — it just moved up the timeline.
What AI can't do is the thing that took fifteen years to build. The look at something and knowing. The moment a client loves a concept and you stay quiet because you already see the problem they haven't found yet. That doesn't live in a prompt.
So yes — AI is real, the shift is real, I'm not pretending any of this is nothing. But I'm also not going to announce my death on the internet every time something new appears.
I'll leave that to everyone else. There seem to be plenty of volunteers.
If you're a designer sitting with this — not panicking, not hustling, just actually trying to figure it out — that's the more honest place to be. That's where I am too.
Still thinking,
Sanaz
Founder — SketchUp for Graphic Designers
p.s. I Asked an AI to Think With Me. It Works Differently Than I Expected.