u/HumanInTheFlow

I’m building a Figma plugin called Snap Site and I’m trying to sanity-check the workflow .

The basic idea:

Paste a public website URL → choose what you need → Snap Site captures pages and creates a review-ready canvas in Figma.

The plugin has 3 modes:

  1. UX Audit Captures key pages and generates first-pass heuristic findings.
  2. Quick screen grabs Captures website pages for review, comparison, or internal discussion.
  3. Upload image Upload a screenshot/UI screen and get annotated feedback in Figma.

The part I’m trying to validate is the workflow:

  • Would you want this inside Figma?
  • Would it save time compared to manual screenshots?
  • Would you use this more for audits, competitor research, landing page reviews, or just quick captures?
  • What would make the output actually useful to you?

I’m not trying to position this as “AI replaces UX audits.” More like: it handles the annoying setup work and gives you a first-pass review canvas.

The value is less “AI does UX” and more “AI speeds up parts of the UI/review process, while the human still owns the judgment.

_______________

Would love honest feedback, especially from anyone who regularly collects website screenshots or prepares review/audit files in Figma.

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u/HumanInTheFlow — 16 days ago
▲ 0 r/UXDesign+1 crossposts

Built something recently that automates the screenshot and first-pass analysis part of UX audits. It runs NNG heuristics and WCAG checks on live websites and drops annotated findings into Figma automatically.

One thing I keep going back and forth on:

Is an AI-generated first pass actually useful as a starting point - or does seeing a list of "issues" before you've looked at the site yourself anchor your thinking in the wrong direction?

I can see both sides. On one hand it removes the tedious setup and gives you a structure to react to and make a start. On the other, there's something to be said for coming to a site cold with no preconceptions before you start forming opinions.

Curious how people here actually work. Do you prefer to look first and note second - or would a structured starting point speed you up?

Not a rhetorical question - genuinely trying to understand if I've solved the right problem?

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u/HumanInTheFlow — 17 days ago