Product Designer × Framer Dev × AI Automation |
I find the gaps your competitors missed
then build systems that close them
→ DM me if you want the same
I’m Adams, a Product & UI/UX Designer who got tired of things getting lost in handoff, so I learned Framer.
Now I ship high-end, responsive experiences and use AI Automation to speed things up.
If you're building something that needs to look elite and work well, let’s talk.
@danmartell This is a humbling but necessary realization for any founder.
If your internal operating system hasn't matured, it creates a ceiling for the entire organization.
Personal development isn't just self-help, it's a high-ROI business strategy.
@Alkid0n That is a critical distinction. AI is brilliant at generating logic and structure, but the final responsibility for security and quality control rests entirely on the builder.
It’s about using the tool to accelerate your work without sacrificing the necessary oversight.
@PlotnikovDev It looks generic. Given the complex nature of the platform, managing matches, escrow, and global payouts, the design needs to be exceptionally clean and intuitive to ensure user trust.
Make sure the design communicates that high-leverage feeling right from the first screen.
@Alkid0n Exactly, it’s changing the speed of execution for everyone. When you stop seeing AI as a threat and start treating it as a core component of your stack, it removes the ceiling on what you can build solo.
@PlotnikovDev It’s clear, you’re building a platform that removes the friction from brand-creator partnerships.
By combining AI matching with escrow and global payouts, you’re solving the trust and logistics problems that usually kill these deals at scale. It looks like a high-leverage tool
@arynadesigns This is exactly why I leaned into AI automation alongside my design work.
The uniqueness isn't just in the design, it’s in the total value you bring to the table.
@PlotnikovDev That’s a classic trap, but realizing it is half the battle.
It's easy to mistake polishing for progress, but at the end of the day, users won't notice the multilingual form if the core offer isn't reaching them.
@bydanielxyz This situation happens to every designer, but framing it as a mistake misses the point.
It isn't necessarily a failure of the design or the client; sometimes it’s just a misalignment of expectations or vision.
@marcrandolph This. It underscores why understanding your own operating system, where you thrive, how you handle stress, and what motivates you, is just as crucial as the business model itself.
You have to build a company that complements your strengths, or you'll inevitably burn out.
@chalaska This is a great perspective on quality versus quantity in a service business.
It’s a shift from being a 'general contractor' to a strategic partner, which not only produces better work but also makes the entire business model more sustainable and less prone to the burnout.