Imagine you’re chatting with ChatGPT, scribbling ideas on a napkin, or digging through old documents. Now, with the Figma app, all of that can be turned into editable diagrams you can actually use.
Here’s what’s new: you can now upload photos, sketches, or even PDFs, and ChatGPT will spin them into FigJam diagrams—flowcharts, Gantt charts, you name it. The best part? These aren’t just static images. They’re real, editable FigJam files you and your team can tinker with. Just mention 'Figma' in your prompt, or let ChatGPT nudge you when it thinks you need it. If you’re outside the EU and on any ChatGPT plan, you’re good to go.
Why does this matter? Well, if you’re a designer, you can finally snap a photo of that napkin sketch and turn it into a flowchart—no more redrawing everything from scratch. Developers can take a screenshot of a pricing page and instantly see the React component structure mapped out. Product managers? Just upload your requirements doc and watch it become a user journey flowchart, ready for the team to pick apart. It’s about turning messy ideas into something everyone can see, edit, and actually use.