Persona Library
Community-sourced UX research

Who actually uses these products,
and what made them stay.

Deep persona profiles for the tools that run modern work. Community-validated. Exportable. Open for contribution.

14
vercelAPP-124
3 comments

The Vercel Agency Deployer

A developer at a web agency or a freelancer who deploys and manages 20–100 client projects on Vercel. They chose Vercel because the developer experience is excellent and Next.js deploys are zero-config. But managing 50 projects across 15 clients has turned deployment into project management. They spend as much time in the Vercel dashboard organizing teams and domains as they do writing code. They know every deployment preview URL is a demo link, and they've sent the wrong preview to the wrong client exactly once.

Aha

A client emails asking why their site is showing an old version.”

asanaAPP-005
6 comments

The Asana Agency Project Manager

A project manager at a digital or creative agency juggling 6–12 active client projects at various stages simultaneously. Asana is their external brain — it holds everything they can't hold in their head, which is most of it. They've been through the Asana certification. They've built the templates. They've trained the team. They're still fighting the battle of getting everyone to actually update their tasks.

Aha

Not a single dramatic moment — more like a Tuesday at 3pm when they realized they hadn't thought about team members who don't update their tasks, making the board a fiction in two weeks.”

basecampAPP-106
6 comments

The Basecamp Small Agency Owner

A small agency owner, studio founder, or remote team lead with 3–20 people who chose Basecamp because they were tired of configuring project management tools. Basecamp's opinionated structure — message boards, to-dos, schedules, docs, campfire — is not a limitation to them. It's the point. They didn't want to design a system. They wanted to use one. They've been on Basecamp for 2–6 years. They've recommended it to other agency owners who are drowning in Notion setups and Jira configurations. Some of them listened.

Aha

A client project kicks off Monday.”

harvestAPP-097
4 comments

The Harvest Freelancer and Agency Owner

A freelancer, consultant, or small agency owner (2–15 people) for whom time is the product. They track hours against client projects and invoice from those hours. Harvest is where the financial reality of their business lives. They've learned that unbilled hours are lost revenue, that clients will dispute invoices without time entries to back them up, and that the difference between a profitable month and a break-even month is often the accuracy of their time tracking. They are disciplined about logging time — or they are trying to become disciplined about it.

Aha

A teammate asked how they managed track time accurately enough that invoices are defensible and projects are profitable.”

calcomAPP-189
4 comments

The Cal.com Scheduling Power User

A consultant, agency owner, or team lead who uses Cal.com because Calendly was too simple for their scheduling needs. They manage round-robin scheduling for a team, paid consultation bookings, multi-timezone availability, and custom booking forms that collect information before the meeting. They chose Cal.com because it's open-source, self-hostable, and extensible in ways Calendly's paid tiers can't match. They are the scheduling architect for their team.

Aha

It happened mid-workflow — a consulting agency needs different scheduling for three scenarios: free 15-minute discovery calls (routed to available consultant), paid 60-minute strategy sessions (It happened mid-workflow — a consulting agency needs different scheduling for three scenarios: free 15-minute discovery calls (routed to available consultant), paid 60-minute strategy sessions (The aha moment happened the first time they used Cal.”

harvestAPP-165
4 comments

The Harvest Freelance Time Tracker

A freelance designer, developer, consultant, or small agency owner who bills by the hour and uses Harvest to track every minute. They know that untracked time is unpaid time, and unpaid time is a silent business killer. They start timers when they begin work, stop them when they break, and review their timesheets weekly to make sure nothing slipped. They've built a system that balances accurate tracking with not letting the tool interrupt their flow. They are both the worker and the business.

Aha

A freelance developer juggles three active clients.”

shopifyAPP-118
4 comments

The Shopify App Developer

A developer or small agency building Shopify apps — either custom apps for specific merchants or public apps for the Shopify App Store. They know Liquid well enough to customize themes and the Admin API well enough to build features merchants ask for. They spend equal time writing code and reading Shopify's changelog to see what broke or changed. They've been through at least one major API version migration and still have scars.

Aha

Not a single dramatic moment — more like a Tuesday at 3pm when they realized they hadn't thought about aPI versioning deadlines that force migration work on their timeline, not the developer's in two weeks.”

photoshopAPP-059
4 comments

The Photoshop Production Designer

A graphic designer — in-house or agency — who uses Photoshop as their primary production tool for image work. They've been in Photoshop for 5–15 years and work with the efficiency of someone who knows exactly where everything is and what everything does. They don't explore menus. They use shortcuts. Their workspace is a system they've tuned. Photoshop is slow sometimes and they've learned to work around it the way you work around a colleague's habits — with patience and workarounds they've stopped noticing.

Aha

The shift was quiet.”

webflowAPP-137
2 comments

The Webflow Design-to-Production Designer

A web designer or design agency owner who ships production websites directly from Webflow — no developer handoff, no code translation step. They think in layout, typography, and spacing, but they've also learned Webflow's class system, CMS collections, and interaction triggers. They are a designer who became a builder. They're proud that they can ship a client site in a week, but they're aware that their Webflow projects are sometimes held together with class naming conventions only they understand.

Aha

A teammate asked how they managed build responsive, pixel-perfect websites that match the design vision exactly.”

pagerdutyAPP-103
3 comments

The PagerDuty On-Call Engineer

A software engineer or site reliability engineer who is on a rotating on-call schedule and whose relationship with PagerDuty is defined by the moments it wakes them up. They've been paged at 3am. They've resolved incidents from their phone in bed. They've also been paged for something that wasn't an incident — a flaky alert, a threshold set too low, a monitoring rule that was never updated after the system changed. Every false positive erodes their trust in the alert and their willingness to respond with full urgency next time. They manage this tension carefully.

Aha

The shift was quiet.”

datadogAPP-019
4 comments

The Datadog SRE

A site reliability engineer or platform engineer at a company with a production system that people depend on. Datadog is their window into that system. They've built dashboards that tell the story of what's happening in production. They've written monitors that page them when something goes wrong. They've been paged at 2am by monitors they wrote themselves and have opinions about that experience. They are better at Datadog than most people at their company and still feel like they're using 30% of what it can do.

Aha

Not a single dramatic moment — more like a Tuesday at 3pm when they realized they hadn't thought about alert fatigue from monitors that fire on normal variance — the cry-wolf problem in two weeks.”

greenhouseAPP-141
3 comments

The Greenhouse Recruiting Coordinator

A recruiting coordinator or in-house recruiter at a growing company who manages 15–40 open roles simultaneously. Greenhouse is their command center — every candidate, every interview, every offer lives there. They are the logistics engine of hiring: scheduling interviews across time zones, nudging hiring managers for feedback, and keeping candidates warm through what feels like an increasingly long process. They measure their success not in hires made but in process efficiency — time-to-fill, interview-to-offer ratio, candidate experience scores.

Aha

A teammate asked how they managed keep candidate response times under 24 hours across all active roles.”

flyioAPP-154
4 comments

The Fly.io Edge Deployer

A backend developer or DevOps engineer who deploys applications on Fly.io because they need their app running close to users globally — not just served from a CDN, but actually computing at the edge. They've outgrown Heroku's simplicity, don't want AWS's complexity, and find Vercel too opinionated for non-Next.js workloads. Fly.io hits the sweet spot: Docker containers deployed globally with a CLI that feels developer-first. They're comfortable with infrastructure but don't want it to be their full-time job.

Aha

Not a single dramatic moment — more like a Tuesday at 3pm when they realized they hadn't thought about stateful workloads at the edge (databases, volumes) have limitations that aren't always clear until production in two weeks.”

datadogAPP-126
3 comments

The Datadog SRE

A site reliability engineer or DevOps engineer responsible for the uptime and performance of production systems. They chose Datadog because it combines metrics, traces, logs, and alerts in one place — but now they're paying for all of it and the bill is terrifying. They've built dashboards that are beautiful, alerts that are precise, and runbooks that nobody reads. They are the person who gets paged at 3 AM and needs to determine in 90 seconds whether this is a real incident or a flapping alert.

Aha

The shift was quiet.”

Recognize yourself in one of these?

Every field in every persona can be confirmed, corrected, or extended by real users. Your lived experience is more accurate than any researcher's archetype.

+ Contribute to a persona