Figma helps marketing teams decide which creative is ready to review, hand off, or reuse. With the connector authorized, Juno can find design files and projects, inspect frames, nodes, components, styles, and variables, review comments, and export approved creative assets for campaigns. It keeps design feedback, brand systems, and file context close to launch planning so marketers can answer what changed, what needs approval, and which assets are ready without pulling every teammate back into Figma.
What Juno does with Figma
Figma gives Juno a practical Figma MCP connector for marketers who need design context beside launch planning. Once authorized, Juno can discover design files and projects, inspect frames, nodes, components, styles, and variables, review design comments, and export approved creative assets for campaigns.
This is useful when the launch plan is clear but the design board is still moving. Juno can turn file context into a campaign readiness brief: what changed, what needs approval, which frames support which channels, and which assets are safe to hand off.
Figma's developer docs describe files as structured design data and point teams toward related context like comments and projects. Its help center notes that comments live on files and prototypes, which is exactly the trail marketers need when creative review gets split across meetings and messages.
Where it fits in your workflow
Connect Figma when a campaign moves from "we have the idea" to "which creative are we actually shipping?" That might be a product launch, paid social refresh, landing page rewrite, webinar promo, or brand asset cleanup.
In practice, Juno can build a launch asset tracker from your campaign brief and the relevant Figma files. It can discover design files, inspect file structure, review design comments, and export creative assets, then organize the output into owners, open questions, approved frames, and next actions.
The strongest use is not design by committee. It is a tidy bridge between marketers, designers, and operators: a roadmap for what needs review, a brief for what changed, or a handoff tracker that says which file, frame, and asset belongs in each channel.
What you get
- Figma discovery notes that map projects, files, key frames, and likely source-of-truth links for the campaign
- File structure summaries that translate frames, nodes, components, styles, and variables into marketer-readable context
- Design comment briefs that separate approvals, open questions, requested edits, and launch blockers
- Export-ready creative assets for ads, social, email, landing pages, sales decks, and stakeholder review
- Brand system checklists that help the team spot reused components, style drift, and assets worth recycling
Frequently asked questions
Does Juno replace Figma?
No. Figma remains the workspace for design, prototyping, comments, and creative review. Juno helps marketers use that context in launch planning, brief writing, asset tracking, and handoffs.
When should I authorize the connector?
Authorize it when your next decision depends on Figma reality: which file is current, what feedback is unresolved, which assets need review, or what can be exported for a campaign.
Can Juno decide whether a design is approved?
Juno can report what the file structure, comments, and available assets indicate. Approval still depends on your team's process, so bring naming conventions, reviewer notes, or a clear approved file or frame when that status matters.
What inputs make the connector most useful?
Bring Figma file or project links, campaign brief, target channels, asset sizes or formats, brand rules, and the review questions you need answered. Juno can turn that into a tracker, brief, or draft handoff pack.
