Why Everything Looks the Same: The Hidden Cost of Algorithm-Driven Design
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You know that moment when you walk into a coffee shop you have never visited and still feel like you can predict the chairs, the lights, the plants, and even the “selfie corner”? We are digging into that creeping sense of design déjà vu and asking the bigger question behind it: why are so many interiors, brands, and spaces starting to look the same, even when the design is genuinely good?
We start with what we call the coffee shop test and the “Pinterest living room” effect, then pull back the curtain on how modern inspiration works. When millions of people begin on the same platforms and the algorithm rewards the most clickable, most saveable images, trends don’t just spread, they multiply. From restaurants built around photo moments to homes styled to look perfect online, it gets easy to accidentally design for the camera instead of the people living, working, eating, and gathering there. We also talk about the safe choice problem: why repeating a proven formula feels less risky, and how that mindset can quietly drain a space of identity.
Then we widen the lens to brand identity and logo design, where minimalism helps with digital flexibility but can push companies toward the same clean, generic look. We even get into AI in design, what it does well, where it can flatten personality, and why the human element still matters most. Our takeaway is simple: trends can inspire, but they cannot replace a point of view. If you want a home, business, or brand that feels memorable, it has to tell a story.
Listen now, then subscribe, share with a design-loving friend, and leave a review. What trend are you tired of seeing everywhere, and where are you still finding originality?
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Learn more at:
https://twinteriors.com/podcast/
https://scottwoolley.com