Jake:<\/strong> One thing is that, with the way everyone is using generative AI and LLMs [large language models], and categorizing and structuring data, websites are going to become less UI spaces and more multimodal experiences that are extremely personalized for each individual. You won\u2019t go to a site to navigate pages, you\u2019ll go to a site and ask it a question or talk to it and, based on your past browsing or other personal data, it will automatically predict what you’re looking for and show that type of content.<\/p>So I think UX is going to shift from being UI heavy to being more user-flow heavy, more user-research based, more in that UX research and planning than it’s going to be about moving pixels. It could get to a point where no two users see the same page on a site just because of the different categories that they’re put in and then some LLM or predictive model serves them what they think they’ll want.<\/p>
Sam:<\/strong> On the same note, in terms of AI, there’s that push towards asking a question and getting an immediate answer. We see this in social media too with all the short-form, quick-hit content. With these shortened attention spans and quicker response times, we must design for the question of “What does the user need, and how do we fulfill this need as efficiently as possible?” Like Jake was saying, this puts less of the focus on UI-heavy experiences. The internet’s not novel anymore, right?<\/p>But I think that this is an opportunity for us to focus more on maximizing usability, maximizing user intent and what users are looking for, and to present that rather than trying to compensate for lack of good UX with UI. So it clears the veil a bit and makes it more relevant to focus on those things because you can\u2019t hide behind that UI anymore, and this is especially prevalent in the multimodal approach and conversational experience. <\/p>\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t<\/div>\n\t\t\t\t<\/div>\n\t\t\t\t