On April 14, 2026, a single SEC filing from Figma, Inc. signaled the end of one of the tech industry’s most watched “collaborative” alliances. Mike Krieger, the Instagram co-founder and current Chief Product Officer at Anthropic officially resigned from Figma’s board of directors. While the filing noted the departure was not due to any “disagreement,” the timing tells a different story. Just three days later, Anthropic unveiled Claude Design, a standalone AI workspace that doesn’t just assist designers, it aims to replace the need for them in the initial “zero-to-one” phase of product creation.
The resignation, effective immediately as of April 14, 2026, marks a pivotal moment in the “Copilot Era” of software. For the past year, Figma and Anthropic had been the poster children for AI-SaaS integration, with Figma utilizing Anthropic’s Claude models to power its internal “AI Design Assistants.”
Krieger, who joined Figma’s board in 2025, was seen as the bridge between the two worlds. However, as Anthropic’s ambitions shifted from providing “models as a service” to “products as a service,” the conflict of interest became untenable. Krieger’s move to Anthropic’s newly formed Labs team in January 2026 was the first signal that the AI firm was ready to build its own “hidden rails” for the creative economy.
The Competitive Threat: Claude Design and Opus 4.7
The catalyst for the exit is Claude Design, powered by the newly released Opus 4.7 model. Unlike Figma, which assumes a trained designer is “in the loop,” Claude Design is built for the “non-designer”, the founders, marketers, and product managers who typically hire agencies or use Figma as a cumbersome middleman.
By allowing users to go from a text prompt to a finished, interactive prototype or landing page in seconds, Anthropic is bypassing the “Interface Illusion” that has kept Figma dominant. If you can describe a website and have the AI build the underlying architecture, the need for a specialized design tool begins to evaporate.
The “SAASpocalypse” and the Talent Chessboard
Krieger’s resignation is being cited by analysts as a “Canary in the Coal Mine” for the broader software-as-a-service (SaaS) industry. The thesis, often dubbed the “SAASpocalypse,” suggests that as AI models become proficient in specialized domains, they will eventually consume the very applications they once served.
“Mike Krieger isn’t just leaving a board; he’s moving from the company that builds the hammers to the company that builds the house automatically.” — Industry Analysis, April 2026
Krieger’s role at Anthropic Labs is specifically to incubate these “frontier products.” By leveraging his experience at Instagram (scaling to billions) and Artifact (mastering algorithmic feed logic), Krieger is helping Anthropic transform Claude from a chatbot into a creative operating system.
Market Impact: A Tale of Two Tickers
The market reaction to the “Design Defection” was swift. While Figma’s stock (trading under $FIG) initially saw a 5% bump on the news of the board “cleaning house,” it slid nearly 7.5% following the official launch of Claude Design on Friday.
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Figma (FIG): Under scrutiny as investors question the “switching costs” of a multiplayer canvas when AI can generate the entire workflow.
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Adobe (ADBE): Slid 1% in sympathy, as its “Firefly” integration is increasingly viewed as an incremental improvement rather than a generational leap.
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Anthropic: Reportedly turned away investment offers at an $800 billion valuation this week, signaling that the market views them as the new “infrastructure” of the digital world.
The departure of Mike Krieger from Figma’s board is the definitive end of the “AI Partnership” honeymoon. In the world of 2026, the lines between the “model” and the “application” have blurred. As Anthropic moves beyond being a base-model provider and toward building end-to-end creative products, established giants like Figma face a grim reality: the AI they invited into their house is now trying to own the deed.
For the modern product team, the “hidden rails” of design are shifting from the mouse and keyboard to the prompt and the agent. Whether Figma can pivot to remain the “infrastructure of collaboration” or if Claude Design will become the new standard remains the most expensive question in Silicon Valley.




