The bait, then the rug-pull.
Greg opens with the rarest pre-roll in podcast land — a sincere 'I just learned about this.' Then he hands the mic to Meng To, who treats DESIGN.md not as a Google product launch but as the missing recipe card every vibe coder has been faking for two years.
What the video promised.
stated at 00:30“By the end of this episode you will become a designer. You're gonna be able to create better design than 99.99% of this planet.”delivered at 49:00
Where the time goes.

01 · Greg's cold open
Greg promises that by the end of the episode 'you will become a designer' — DESIGN.md is the unlock, his friend Meng will demo the workflow.

02 · Sippin' Time bumper
Branded juice-box transition cuts from cold open to the conversation proper.

03 · What is DESIGN.md (Meng's framing)
Meng explains DESIGN.md as a portable blueprint that lets one beautiful design propagate across landing pages, mobile, slides, and motion — solving the 'great first screen, generic everything after' problem.

04 · Meng's prep + thank you
Meng credits Greg's pod for taking him from $3K to $15K MRR, then announces he prepared slides via Reply Slides / Hyperframes / Remotion. Sets up the screen-share.

05 · Five-point agenda + DESIGN.md = soul of design
Meng frames DESIGN.md as 'the soul of a design ported into the agent' — colors, typography, the system — same family as agents.md / skills.md / soul.md, but for visual design.

06 · Idea Browser ad break
Greg drops a mid-roll for his Thursday workshop on building businesses in an AI world via ideabrowser.com.

07 · One DNA, many mediums
Meng shows a slide and a promo video built from the same DESIGN.md — 'same DNA, different approach' — and points at a community where these markdown files live as free downloads.

08 · Recipe vs dish vs ingredients
Core metaphor: HTML is the finished dish, DESIGN.md is the recipe, skills are the ingredients. Combine all three to get repeatable beautiful output.

09 · Design Drift — the real problem
Meng names the failure mode: 'design drift.' You one-shot a great first screen, then every later page diverges. DESIGN.md is the cure because the system travels with the prompt.
10 · Why templates fail vs blueprints win
Templates lock you behind Figma/Framer/Webflow pixels — you can't tell an agent what they mean. DESIGN.md communities share the blueprint instead, so the AI gets a foundational system rather than a literal copy.
11 · Cookie-cutter is dead
Greg + Meng riff on Shopify/WordPress/Framer sites all looking identical — like a downtown core with homogeneous buildings. Purple-gradient era is over.
12 · Taste as the real moat
Meng reframes intelligence as 'making ultra-quick decisions about taste.' DESIGN.md is design memory you can transfer between Lovable, Cursor, Codex, Claude Code, Figma — your taste, portable.
13 · Local is the moat
Meng's products generate MD files in nested folders he can open in Codex/OpenClaude — 'because it's local' the agent can read the whole knowledge graph in one shot. Tokens, lock-in, and remote-only tools are the contrast.
14 · Demo setup — Aura, Variant, remix
Meng walks Variant.com and his own Aura — remix-click-remix loops to find a starting design, then download both the HTML and the DESIGN.md so the AI gets the recipe plus the finished dish.
15 · Skills as ingredients (lasers, WebGL, etc.)
Skills are reusable prompt blocks for visual effects — lasers, WebGL/Three.js, skeuomorphism, 3D globes. Meng claims any landing page with a 'laser' skill outperforms because it breaks the generic baseline.
16 · Live build in Aura + Google Stitch
Meng creates a landing page for a fake startup 'Aura' with the attached DESIGN.md, then tries the same prompt in Google Stitch to compare. DESIGN.md attachment is still new to most platforms — that's the edge.
17 · Newform — queuing multiple designs at once
Meng demos Newform, his own tool: queue a motion design, a mobile version, a slide deck, all from the same DESIGN.md + skill stack. Comparison to Midjourney's parallel generation flow.
18 · Skills section deep-dive (63 skills)
Tour of Newform's skill marketplace — skeuomorphic, 3D, batch design, copywriting skills. Each one is just a copyable prompt; you can grab only the colors or only the typography. Vocabulary lesson on font smoothing, body fonts, secondary buttons.
19 · 1,000 prompts per product
Greg asks how many prompts Meng uses to build one of these. Guess: 25. Reality: at least 1,000, sometimes 10,000. Meng is currently building four products solo (Aura, Newform, DreamCut, rebuilt Design Code).
20 · Reference → systemize → iterate → remix
Meng's full loop: start with a reference, generate, inspect, systemize via DESIGN.md, iterate (the 1,000-prompt phase), then remix into slides / mobile / promo videos / Hyperframes / Remotion.
21 · Iteration vs remix
Iteration = small incremental polish when you're happy. Remix = jumping to a new product category. Meng is 90% iteration, 10% remix. 'Soul' is what humans feel across the screen — care has just migrated into the prompting workflow.
22 · What's changed for designers
Designers do less pixel-pushing and more 'judgment per minute.' Meng cites the Amazon CEO 'one powerful decision per day' line. Designers are now creators — making YouTube videos, marketing, promo material.
23 · Solo vs team — Meng's holding-company model
Meng builds each product solo for a month (1,000–10,000 iterations) then hands off to his team for templates/videos/expansion. Greg names it: a holding company of products as a one-person business — impossible a few years ago.
24 · Taste, niche, authenticity (the closing rant)
Meng's parting argument: the only moat is keeping up with what's new. Build taste by surrounding yourself with great design. Niche beats generalist. Anything that looks like another thing loses 10-100x value.
25 · Second-brain-for-design + outro
Greg's add: most of us have second brains for notes but not for design inspiration — start capturing references like meeting notes. Meng agrees, outro thanks and links in show notes.
Visual structure at a glance.
Named ideas worth stealing.
Recipe / Dish / Ingredients
- DESIGN.md = the recipe
- HTML = the finished dish
- skills = the ingredients
Three-part mental model for how Meng composes a design system that AI agents can re-execute.
Design Drift
The named failure mode: you one-shot a great first screen, then every later screen/page/section diverges from it because the agent has no persistent system to anchor to. DESIGN.md fixes it because the foundation travels with every prompt.
Reference → Generate → Inspect → Systemize → Iterate → Remix
- Reference (start with someone else's work)
- Generate (one-shot attempt)
- Inspect (what worked)
- Systemize (DESIGN.md captures the rules)
- Iterate (1,000 small prompts)
- Remix (port to new medium)
Meng's full design workflow loop — taught as the antidote to 'one-shot and stop.'
Iteration vs Remix
Two different verbs that look the same on the surface. Iteration = polish a happy product (90% of the time). Remix = launch a new product category from the same DNA (10%).
The .md family (agents.md / skills.md / soul.md / DESIGN.md)
- agents.md (Codex/Claude Code instructions)
- skills.md (reusable prompt blocks)
- soul.md (character/persona)
- DESIGN.md (visual design system)
DESIGN.md is the latest sibling in a family of markdown-as-config files for AI agents.
Skills as ingredients
- lasers
- WebGL / Three.js animation
- skeuomorphism
- 3D globes
- copywriting
Reusable, copyable prompt fragments stored in a marketplace. Each one is a single special effect or rule. Mix-and-match into a design.
Judgment per minute
The new designer KPI. Less pixel-pushing, more decisions. Agent does the moving; human does the judging.
Second brain for design
Most builders have second brains for notes and meetings but nothing for design inspiration. Greg argues you should capture references the same way.
Lines you could clip.
“By the end of this episode, you will become a designer. You're gonna be able to create better design than 99.99% of this planet.”
“The HTML is more like the finished dish, and the MD file is more like the recipe. The skills are like the ingredients.”
“How do you solve this problem, which is design drift?”
“It's hard to tell if this is made by a human or by AI, but I can guarantee you 100% that this was made by AI.”
“Can you guess how many prompts I use to build these products? At least a thousand.”
“AI is not making me lazier. AI is making me more work more.”
“We're doing a lot less of the moving pixels, moving rectangle and resizing things. We're doing a lot more judgment per minute.”
“Nowadays I see a website with purple gradient, I don't wanna even wanna scroll anymore.”
“Niche is the keyword here because you cannot compete anymore with people who are generalized.”
How they spent the runtime.
- 06:28–07:05 · Greg Isenberg's ideabrowser.com workshop (self-promo, not paid sponsor)
Things they pointed at.
How they asked for the click.
“I'll include links where you can follow Meng to get some creative inspiration as well as links for some of the tools he's working on. Go check it out in the description, in the show notes.”
Soft, end-of-episode pointer to show notes. No urgency, no hard ask. The earlier mid-roll for ideabrowser.com workshop is the real CTA energetically.
Word for word.
Steal the format.
Joe is already living the agents.md / soul.md life — DESIGN.md is the same instinct extended to the visual layer, and the LFB version is one file per project plus a public skills library.
- Ship a DESIGN.md for every Joe-property: MCN, ModBoard, JoeFlow, Clip Lab, Mod Producer. One file, every prompt attaches it. Solve your own design drift before pitching anyone else's.
- Stand up a public 'mod-skills' marketplace — Meng's lasers / WebGL / skeuomorph pattern maps cleanly to JACE/REESE/SAGE soul.md as a model. Each skill is a copyable prompt fragment. This is a $6 Stack-shaped product on its own.
- Use 'design drift' as the named pain in MCN+ landing copy. It's a specific phrase vibe coders feel and can't currently name — naming it is the marketing.
- The 1,000-iterations line is the cleanest Killing Excuses bait in months. Build Joe / Lazy Joe sketch: 'AI made it lazy' vs 'AI made me work more.' Meng's exact framing.
- Borrow the recipe/dish/ingredients metaphor verbatim when you teach the $6 Stack — it generalizes from design to any markdown-driven workflow.
- Build a 'second brain for design' inside ModBoard — it's the niche Greg names at the end and no one owns. Capture references with hotkeys, port them to DESIGN.md, ship as a Mod-feature.
What this could mean for you.
Stop hunting for the perfect template. Find a designer whose system you love, grab their DESIGN.md, and attach it to every prompt — the system travels with you across every tool.
- Download a DESIGN.md from Meng's Aura community (or any open marketplace) and treat it like a brand bible — paste it at the top of every prompt before you ask for new screens.
- Always download two files together: the DESIGN.md (the recipe) AND a sample HTML page (the finished dish). The agent needs both to keep your output consistent.
- Skip 'purple gradient' defaults. Pick one named visual skill (lasers, 3D, skeuomorph) that makes your product distinctive and bake it into your file.
- Don't expect a one-shot to land. Plan for hundreds of small iterations — that's the work, not the prompt.
- When you switch tools (Lovable to Cursor to Figma) bring the same DESIGN.md with you. That's how you stop the 'great first screen, generic everything else' problem.







































































