Justin Bartak · Product · November 21, 2025 · 4 min read ·
How to Make Product Design Sexy
TL;DR
The biggest opportunities rarely look glamorous. They hide in plain sight, inside industries weighed down by complexity, legacy systems, and inertia.
The biggest opportunities rarely look glamorous. They hide in plain sight, inside industries weighed down by complexity, legacy systems, and inertia. The software is often clunky. The workflows are exhausting. The experiences feel like they were designed to be tolerated, not loved.
And that is exactly why I am drawn to them.
Because when you elevate the ordinary through great design, you don't just improve a product. You change how people feel. You restore dignity to experiences that have been stripped of it for decades. You turn friction into flow. Fatigue into confidence.
This is the work that excites me most. Not chasing what is already desirable, but transforming what has been neglected into something people cannot imagine living without.
Seeing potential where others do not
Most people chase shiny markets. I chose the unsexy ones on purpose.
CRM. ERP. Tax. Accounting. Payments. Banking. PropTech. FinTech.
These categories may not look glamorous, but they power the global economy. Millions of people live inside these tools every day. And for years, the industry asked them to accept confusion as the cost of doing business.
They were never boring. They were starving for design.
When you fix these experiences, you do not just create delight. You create relief. You give people time back. You reduce errors. You turn compliance into confidence. You make the work feel lighter.
That is sexy.
Apple and Tesla taught us a lesson
Apple did not win by shipping more features. Tesla did not win by building just another car.
They both redefined how technology makes people feel.
They took functional categories and made them objects of desire. Not by decoration, but by rethinking the entire experience. By treating craft as strategy. By treating simplicity as power.
That is the philosophy I carry forward.
Not to polish what already exists. To rebuild it until it feels inevitable.
As if it always should have worked this way.
The playbook for making design sexy
Sexy design is not neon gradients. It is not clever animations. It is not marketing gloss.
Sexy is:
- Clarity that creates instant confidence
- Speed that makes the work feel effortless
- A system that respects attention instead of stealing it
- A product that feels calm under pressure
- An experience so obvious it becomes invisible
When people feel capable, they feel loyal. When they feel in control, they tell others. That is how design becomes growth.
AI is the amplifier
Great design requires iteration. In these industries, speed matters.
I believe in Apple level taste with Tesla level velocity.
AI lets me prototype in hours what used to take weeks. It does not replace creativity. It compresses the distance between intent and execution. It lets small teams explore more directions, test more assumptions, and arrive at clarity faster than legacy competitors ever can.
AI is not the author. It is the accelerator.
Proof in practice
At Ntractive and Gro CRM, a utilitarian platform became so intuitive it was featured by Apple and showcased at WWDC.
At Taxa and Aiwyn, a historically unsexy tax category became an AI native platform experience strong enough to help secure $113M in funding.
At Norhart, I brought the same philosophy to complex capital and FinTech systems, turning intricate flows into calm, governed experiences people could trust.
The pattern is consistent.
Find the category everyone tolerates. Raise the bar until it becomes desirable. Ship with clarity.
Why it matters
The next category defining companies will not come from obvious places.
They will rise from industries everyone else ignores, because that is where design creates exponential value. When you transform the unsexy into the irresistible, you do not just win customers.
You change the standard.
Product design is not decoration. It is the engine.




