Author: Zen, PANews
For Musk, the long-standing vision of turning X into a "super app" is entering a critical phase of accelerated implementation. At this juncture, X's design team recently underwent a significant personnel adjustment—Benji Taylor joined the team to lead the overall design work.
This key personnel change quickly thrust Taylor into the spotlight. Shortly after officially announcing his leadership of X's design work, he stated his attitude with the phrase "Top priority: improve everything," and this post garnered hundreds of millions of views in a short time, becoming an important point of observation for this appointment.
Taylor has long been in the cryptocurrency industry, and he is not the type of figure who builds visibility through frequent public statements. From his publicly visible career trajectory, he is a pure product designer, consistently focused on repackaging complex capabilities that originally belonged only to a small group of advanced users into products that a broader range of users can understand and are willing to use.
Crypto Product Methodology: Breaking Down Usage Barriers
In the past, Benji Taylor was not a highly visible figure, but in product and design circles, his path is quite clear. According to his personal homepage, he has long focused on the intersection of consumer software, social products, and on-chain products, which has formed the main thread of all his career choices since.
Taylor initially founded the consumer software company Los Feliz Engineering (LFE), which created the real-time communication app Honk and the later self-custody wallet Family, which is more familiar to the crypto industry. LFE was acquired by Aave Labs in September 2023, after which Taylor served as CPO at Aave until October 2025, then as Head of Design at Base under Coinbase, and now leads X's design team.
If Honk represents Taylor's early understanding of consumer communication products, then Family is the stage where he truly established industry recognition and product methodology.
In November 2024, the official Family blog defined it as a "secure, beautifully designed, feature-rich" non-custodial wallet at its official launch, emphasizing that it is not only for experienced users but also for a broader audience "from beginners to experts." Users can create a wallet via email or phone number combined with a passkey or password, rather than directly facing the high-threshold entry common in traditional crypto wallets.
Six months later, Family further released "Making Family Simpler & Safer." In this official introduction, Family clearly summarized its new direction: making wallet creation, security, and recovery simpler and safer. Users can onboard via email or SMS, without directly dealing with mnemonic-based entry, while leveraging passkeys, encryption, and multiple recovery options to balance security and control.
Benji Taylor publicly stated at the time that onboarding for crypto products has historically been "confusing and full of friction," and Family's goal is to remove the technical barriers that prevent users from getting started, while maintaining user control over assets. For many non-crypto users, this design is not a nice-to-have but a prerequisite for whether they will take the first step.
From a product perspective, the most important aspect of Family is not just "making a wallet," but its effort to transform the wallet from a technical tool into an entry point closer to everyday software. This is why Avara, in February 2026, when reviewing the acquisition, specifically emphasized that the Family team later contributed not only to the wallet itself but also to the Aave App, Aave Pro, developer documentation, and a broader design system.
Digesting Product Complexity for X Money
Understanding what Benji Taylor has done over the past few years and looking back at X's current stage, it becomes clear that this appointment is highly targeted. X currently does not lack the ability to tell stories; it lacks the ability to truly embed payment functionality into the main social platform product.
Around the same time Benji Taylor joined X, X's payment business, X Money, also entered a clearer implementation window. According to multiple media reports, Musk stated that X Money will enter early public access this month. Earlier, X had already partnered with Visa; X Money accounts will support users funding their X wallets, linking debit cards for peer-to-peer payments, and transferring funds back to bank accounts.
Therefore, X does not need someone solely responsible for visual style, but someone who understands how "accounts, permissions, security, and fund flows" are expressed within the interface. What Taylor did with Family precisely involved reducing entry barriers and friction in account management, while finding a balance between security and usability.
If we break down the capabilities X values in Benji Taylor a bit further, they can roughly be summarized into three layers.
First, the ability to make new users dare to start using. A point Family repeatedly emphasized is that the first use should not feel like a technical exam. Email, phone number, passkey—these seemingly minor design details actually lower the barrier to first use. This is equally critical for X Money. The payment function is not intended for a small group of technical users; it must cater to ordinary users on the social platform.
Second, the ability to bridge security and ease of use. Family's official introduction repeatedly mentioned self-custody, encryption, passkeys, multiple recovery options, and clearer process design around security actions. If X wants to make payments a high-frequency capability, it cannot only emphasize speed and convenience; it must also make users feel the system is trustworthy. Taylor's experience lies precisely at the intersection of control and convenience.
Third, the ability to solidify capabilities into platform-level infrastructure. Taylor's design of Family Accounts as embedded wallet infrastructure was widely used in the Aave App, Aave Pro, and other products. This indicates that Taylor's value is not just in creating a beautiful standalone application, but in being able to turn account and wallet capabilities into underlying modules reusable across the entire product matrix. This is especially important for X: if X Money is to evolve from a single payment attempt into an infrastructure贯穿 (penetrating) creator revenue, user transfers, subscriptions, and even broader financial entry points, it needs such capability.
The most noteworthy aspect of Benji Taylor is not how many hot companies or sectors have appeared in his resume, but that these experiences have consistently revolved around a rarely loudly discussed yet decisive question for product success: can complex systems be used naturally by ordinary people?
Honk was one answer, Family was a clearer answer, and Avara's absorption of Family shows that this answer is replicable. Now, this question is brought to X. For Musk, the "super app" is a strategy; for users, it must first be an experience.
X's choice of Benji Taylor on the eve of its payment launch perhaps看重 (values) precisely this: when a platform prepares to integrate accounts, wallets, payments, and social relationships into a whole, what is truly critical is often not the person who best articulates the vision, but the one who best digests the complexity.








