Create styling guides that help customers instantly see how to wear and pair your products.
Super useful for clothing brands, jewelry brands, and fashion businesses that want to boost sales and conversions💕💯.
Upload to your website or social media.
If you’re still posting designs the same way you did in 2023, don’t expect 2026 clients to notice you.
Every week I see designers saying:
“There are no design jobs anymore.”
No.
There are plenty of design jobs.
There are fewer opportunities for designers who refuse to evolve.
The market didn’t disappear.
The rules changed.
There is a new boss in town.
AI.
You don’t have to like it.
But you do have to master it.
If your content still looks like this:
❌ Before → After
Switch it up:
🔄 AI Version → My Version
Show what AI produced.
Then show what you improved.
That’s where your value is.
📱 Stop posting static UI screenshots.
Turn them into clickable prototypes.
🎥 Record a quick walkthrough.
Show your thinking, not just the final screen.
🔗 Add a live link.
Let people experience your work instead of just looking at it.
Most designers run out of inspiration. The good ones just know where to look.
Here are 7 sites that consistently give me design inspiration inspiration :
1. Mobbin — the biggest mobile app screen library around. Whenever I’m unsure how a flow should feel, I search Mobbin first. Real shipped products, not concepts.
2. Awwwards — the classic. A curated gallery of award-winning websites, still one of the fastest ways to see what “great” looks like right now.
3. Dribbble — good for shot-level inspiration. Not full case studies, just quick hits of UI concepts and visual direction when you need to loosen up your thinking.
4. Land-book — a landing page gallery you can filter by industry or style. Useful when you need inspiration that’s actually close to the brief you’re working on.
5. SiteInspire — minimal, tightly curated web design showcase. Less noise than Awwwards, good when you want fewer options but higher quality.
6. Godly — beautifully designed sites in the same lane as Cuberto, but broader. Good for seeing trends across studios, not just one.
7. Behance — full case studies, not just screenshots. Useful when you want to see the thinking behind a design, not just the final shot.
Repost and bookmark for later .
What site do you go to when you’re stuck?
If you’re still posting designs the same way you did in 2023, don’t expect 2026 clients to notice you.
Every week I see designers saying:
“There are no design jobs anymore.”
No.
There are plenty of design jobs.
There are fewer opportunities for designers who refuse to evolve.
The market didn’t disappear.
The rules changed.
There is a new boss in town.
AI.
You don’t have to like it.
But you do have to master it.
If your content still looks like this:
❌ Before → After
Switch it up:
🔄 AI Version → My Version
Show what AI produced.
Then show what you improved.
That’s where your value is.
📱 Stop posting static UI screenshots.
Turn them into clickable prototypes.
🎥 Record a quick walkthrough.
Show your thinking, not just the final screen.
🔗 Add a live link.
Let people experience your work instead of just looking at it.
@Coachbenjamin_ This is it. A lot of people have the skills but struggle with positioning, visibility, and knowing where to look. The opportunity exists, but you have to be intentional about putting yourself in the right places.
@justgozieprince You’re very wrong most of these Ai tools have free and paid versions , even the Figma we use for design have free and paid version , so I don’t really understand your point .
Are you saying they should not bother using or learning Ai because some of them are paid ?
If you’re targeting US, UK, or European clients, your time availability matters almost as much as your skill and portfolio.
When you’re targeting clients in the US, UK, Germany, or other parts of Europe, you can’t work only on your timezone.
If a client messages you during their workday and you reply hours later, they’ve probably slept or moved on to someone else.
I’ve lost opportunities simply because I responded too late.
Now, I pay attention to my target clients’ time zones.
Sometimes that means staying up a little late, adjusting my sleep schedule, and being available when they’re online.
If you’re serious about landing international clients, don’t just optimize your skills, optimize your availability.
If you’re still posting designs the same way you did in 2023, don’t expect 2026 clients to notice you.
Every week I see designers saying:
“There are no design jobs anymore.”
No.
There are plenty of design jobs.
There are fewer opportunities for designers who refuse to evolve.
The market didn’t disappear.
The rules changed.
There is a new boss in town.
AI.
You don’t have to like it.
But you do have to master it.
If your content still looks like this:
❌ Before → After
Switch it up:
🔄 AI Version → My Version
Show what AI produced.
Then show what you improved.
That’s where your value is.
📱 Stop posting static UI screenshots.
Turn them into clickable prototypes.
🎥 Record a quick walkthrough.
Show your thinking, not just the final screen.
🔗 Add a live link.
Let people experience your work instead of just looking at it.