Cursor poaches Claude design lead as AI agent race intensifies

- Jenny Wen, former design lead for Anthropic’s Claude and Cowork, has joined Cursor as its new Head of Design, bringing experience building AI workplace products.
- Her move comes as Cursor expands beyond coding assistants with plans for AI workplace tools that could compete with Anthropic’s Cowork and OpenAI’s ChatGPT Work.
- The hire highlights the growing competition for AI product talent, as companies increasingly compete on user experience—not just model performance.
Jenny Wen, the designer involved in creating Anthropic’s Claude and the general-purpose AI agent Cowork, has joined Cursor as its new head of design. She will be leveraging her experience at one of the most established AI labs at a rapidly growing company that aims to develop more than coding tools.
Wen disclosed the news on X on July 13, after leaving Anthropic to take the position at Cursor, where she would be able to lead “a team that cares so deeply about craft, quality, and building great tools.” She chose to make this decision at a time when Cursor is developing its own AI agent aimed at helping in the workplace, which puts it in competition with the product that Wen was involved in at Anthropic.
From Claude to Cursor
During her time at Anthropic, Wen had the task of designing both Claude and Cowork, the latter being the name of the AI agent that was designed to handle complex workplace tasks. According to Wen’s portfolio, in 2025 Wen was heavily involved in directing the roadmap of Cowork as well as contributing to the development of the product post-launch. Before Anthropic, Wen worked at Figma as its Director of Design, where she launched FigJam, and previously served as the design leader at Dropbox, Square, and Shopify.
The uniqueness of Wen’s experience lies in the integration of product strategy and product creation. With more AI companies competing to develop better models, it is worth remembering that the skill to create desirable products remains just as crucial as the technical part.
Initially recognized as an AI coding assistant, Cursor now aspires to pursue more ambitious goals.
According to The Information, the company is now working on the creation of an AI assistant called Sand, which can manage e-mails and spreadsheets and help with engineering tasks. If released successfully, it will compete with Cowork by Anthropic and the recently introduced ChatGPT Work by OpenAI.
Cursor has not made any announcements regarding the project.
Additionally, the company is gearing up for its next growth stage. SpaceX declared in June that it has intentions to take over Anysphere, the parent company of Cursor, in an all-stock transaction worth $60 billion expected to close later this year. The agreement will give Cursor more resources, thus enabling it to widen its scope beyond just developing software.
Why this matters for Anthropic?
It is interesting to note that the timing takes place at a time when Anthropic has expanded the capabilities and accessibility of Cowork.
The company has updated the service for use on both mobile and the web, as well as added the cloud execution functionality, which enables tasks to continue even if the user has disconnected. Anthropic even states that, out of its analysis of about 1.2 million Cowork sessions, knowledge-work tasks make up almost half of all usage, suggesting the product is increasingly being used for more than software development.
While Wen’s leaving may not indicate difficult times ahead for Anthropic, it points to the intense competition among AI firms for talented people like product leaders. Now that emerging AI technologies are growing in sophistication, the challenge is not just about developing better technologies, but also about creating software that easily fits into the routines of end-users.
This is where experienced design leaders can make a big difference. Creating an effective workplace AI agent involves more than just technical performance. In addition to this, it requires proper design of workflows, simple interfaces, and a lot of trust for users to delegate important tasks. Those are qualities which, if developed, can give a strong competitive advantage.
A broader shift in the AI talent market
This step by Wen is indicative of a bigger trend emerging within the competitive environment surrounding AI enterprises.
Whereas back in the days of early generative AI, the battle for talent was mainly carried out between researchers and infrastructure engineers, now there is competition among businesses to secure experts who already have experience working on creating and deploying AI products. These experts will be able to share valuable information about consumer behavior and preferences, as well as features that actually work.
In the case of Cursor, the recruitment of the designer of one of the first AI workplace assistants will allow the company to go beyond programming in terms of further steps in its development. In the case of Anthropic, the hiring shows how the market has developed, with competition, among other things, both for skilled workers and for the designers behind those who turn advanced AI into products.
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FAQs
Who is Jenny Wen?
She is a designer who led design for Claude and its Cowork agent at Anthropic, and was previously Director of Design at Figma, where she brought FigJam to market. She announced on July 13 that she is joining Cursor as head of design.
What is Cursor building to compete with Claude Cowork?
According to The Information, as reported by PYMNTS, Cursor is developing a general-purpose AI agent known internally as Sand that would handle emails and texts, organize spreadsheets, and take on engineering work. Cursor has not decided whether to launch it.
Who is acquiring Cursor?
SpaceX said in June it would acquire Cursor in a $60 billion all-stock deal expected to close in the second half of the year, adding the startup to its AI unit.
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Ashish Kumar
Ashish Kumar is a crypto and financial journalist with eight years of newsroom experience. He covers what’s happening with crypto markets, regulation, DeFi, and exchange ecosystems. He has worked with Coingape, Todayq, and Newsroompost. Ashish holds a PGDP in English Journalism from the IIMC. He has also interviewed industry figures including Arthur Hayes, Yat Siu, Austin Federa, and more.
















