Design Averaging: The Invisible Reason Your Site Feels Generic
Vague requests get you the statistical average of every design an AI has ever seen. That's not a criticism of the tool — it's just what happens when you don't give it anything specific to aim at. Design critics call this design averaging: layouts that feel familiar because they're statistically normal. Visual hierarchies that technically function but feel like they were made for no one in particular.
Visitors can't always articulate what's wrong. But they feel the absence of a real point of view — and that feeling shows up as bounce rate.
The prompt that fixes this
"Anchor my site's visual direction to this reference: [paste a screenshot or link of a site you admire]. Match its type scale, spacing rhythm, and how it uses a single accent color, but do not copy it. Write real, specific copy for MY business, not filler lines. Tell me what you changed and why."
This is the bonus prompt in the series — and most people skip it. That's exactly why it works so well: a real reference breaks the statistical-average pattern in a way no amount of adjective-stacking ("modern," "clean," "premium") ever will.
Why a reference beats a vibe
- A vibe is fuzzy. "Make it feel premium" could mean a hundred different things to a model that has seen a hundred thousand "premium" sites.
- A reference is a fixed point. Type scale, spacing rhythm, and a single accent color are all measurable — Claude can extract and apply them precisely.
- Anchoring isn't copying. The prompt explicitly asks for real, specific copy for your business — the reference sets the visual system, not the content.
How to pick a good reference
Don't reach for another site in your exact niche — you'll end up looking like a copy of a competitor. Instead, pull from adjacent industries with strong design systems: fintech, premium SaaS, design studios themselves. Borrow the system, not the subject matter.