Figma: New Make Connectors β€” Amplitude, Box, Dovetail, Granola, Marvin, and zeroheight

Figma

Figma expanded its Make prototyping platform with six new verified partner connectors β€” Amplitude, Box, Dovetail, Granola, Marvin, and zeroheight β€” bringing real-world product analytics, user research, meeting context, and design system documentation directly into AI-driven prototyping sessions. Figma also introduced support for custom MCP connectors, allowing teams to connect Make to any remote MCP server beyond the curated partner list.


Make Expands Its Connector Ecosystem with Six New Partners and Custom MCP Support

Figma Make, the company's AI-driven prompt-to-prototype tool, added six new verified partner connectors and introduced support for custom MCP (Model Context Protocol) servers β€” extending the range of real-world data and context that can feed directly into prototype generation.

The Six New Verified Partner Connectors

Each connector integrates a distinct category of product or organizational context into Make's chat-based prototyping workflow:

Amplitude brings product analytics directly into Make. Designers can query user trends, funnels, and session replays from Amplitude without leaving the prototyping environment. It becomes possible to generate design variants mapped to distinct user cohorts β€” new users versus power users, for example β€” based on live behavioral data from Amplitude's analytics platform.

Box allows teams to access files and content stored in Box hubs directly within Make, while respecting the existing security policies configured in Box. This is particularly relevant for enterprise teams where design specifications and reference documents live in managed storage environments.

Dovetail surfaces customer research data inside Make, allowing designers to search across projects, docs, and user data in Dovetail to inform design decisions in context. Rather than switching apps to find relevant research, designers can reference it directly from the Make chat.

Granola brings meeting intelligence into the prototyping workflow. Designers can pull in notes from past meetings, search for specific topics discussed, and extract decisions or action items from meeting history β€” bridging the gap between verbal alignment in meetings and the design work that follows.

Marvin (available on Enterprise plans) brings structured user feedback and research findings into Make, helping design decisions stay grounded in research stored in Marvin repositories.

zeroheight (also Enterprise-only) allows Make to generate on-system prototypes using design system documentation from zeroheight styleguides. Rather than producing generic AI-generated UI, this connector enables Make to respect established component standards from the first prompt.

Custom MCP Connector Support

Beyond the six new verified partners, Figma introduced support for connecting Make to any remote MCP server. Teams navigate to Connectors in Make, select "Add custom connector," enter their server details, authenticate, and choose which resources to expose. Once set up, the connector is available via the @ mention syntax within any Make file. Organization admins can control which connectors are available across the organization from admin settings.

Pulling It All Together

Make connectors represent a meaningful evolution in how Figma positions its AI prototyping tool. Rather than working from prompts describing a product, Make can now pull live context from analytics platforms, research repositories, design systems, project management tools, and meeting notes to generate prototypes that reflect the actual, current state of a product. Custom MCP support extends this further to any organization-specific tooling teams already rely on.


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Figma: New Make Connectors β€” Amplitude, Box, Dovetail, Granola, Marvin, and zeroheight | Yet Another Changelog