AI is making code cheaper to write every month. Dessn just raised $6 million betting that design becomes the next thing investors fight over.
The startup is two years old and has four employees. Customers include health company Color, voice AI company Wispr, and fintech Mercury.
The Round
Dessn closed a $6 million round led by Connect Ventures. Betaworks and N49P also joined in.
The product runs your codebase in the cloud with no setup needed. The pitch is that designers can work directly on production code, instead of mocking up something a developer has to rebuild later.
That setup is different from tools like Lovable or v0 by Vercel, which are built for starting from scratch. Dessn is made for teams that already have a product and want to iterate fast.
Pricing starts free for one project. Paid plans then start at $39 per user per month, with higher tiers unlocking more prompts and shareable links.
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The Thesis
Co-founder Nim Cheema put the bet plainly: AI is making code cheap, so software companies will need to compete on design instead.
"When we started the company two years ago, our whole thesis was [that] the code is going to get commoditized - and in a world where code is insanely cheap, you just get a lot more software, and then design becomes a way that's a differentiator," Cheema told TechCrunch.
That's also why Dessn won't integrate with Figma. The startup says working in design files instead of code keeps teams away from production, which goes against its whole ethos.
Co-founder Gabriella Hachem said the low setup cost means teams don't have to drop their current design tool to try Dessn. "You can come in and use it for one project and then another one," she said.
What to Watch
Dessn doesn't have integrations yet. The team plans to plug into Slack and meeting notetakers like Granola, so it can spin up prototypes from real conversations.
Betaworks partner Jordan Crook called Dessn "the only product that has perfect fidelity within the code base/production, rather than trying to design and turn it into code."
The wider AI design space is getting crowded. Newer tools like Visual Electric, Weavy, Flora, and Krea are all chasing the same idea, with bigger backers like Perplexity and Figma behind them.
Dessn's bet is that working in production code, instead of mock-ups, will keep its product stickier than rivals built on top of design files.
The company stays small for now, with just four people. The plan is to add a few more hires, but not balloon the team while it figures out which features matter most to paying customers.
If code keeps getting cheaper, design becomes the thing that sets software companies apart.
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