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.

77
shopifyAPP-075
5 comments

The Shopify DTC Brand Owner

A founder or owner of a direct-to-consumer brand doing $10K–$500K in annual revenue on Shopify. They launched the store themselves, chose the theme themselves, and manage it themselves — occasionally with help from a contractor they can barely afford. They know their products, their customers, and their margins. They do not know why their abandoned cart rate is what it is or how to fix it, but they know it matters.

Aha

It's November 8th.”

superhumanAPP-082
4 comments

The Superhuman Executive

A founder, executive, investor, or senior individual contributor for whom email is a primary work surface and inbox zero is not aspirational — it is the operating condition required to function. They use Superhuman because they did the math: the time saved per email multiplied by 200 emails per day is real money. They have strong keyboard habits. They were already fast at email. Superhuman made them faster. They will tell you about it if you ask, and sometimes if you don't.

Aha

Not a single dramatic moment — more like a Tuesday at 3pm when they realized they hadn't thought about mobile experience that can't fully replicate the keyboard-driven speed of desktop in two weeks.”

notionAPP-055
6 comments

The Notion Second-Brain Builder

A solo founder, PM, or highly organized individual contributor who has made Notion the center of their work life. They have a workspace that would take three hours to explain to someone new. They've built custom dashboards, linked databases, and templates they're genuinely proud of. They've also started from scratch twice after a system got too complex to maintain. They believe the perfect Notion setup is always two weekends away.

Aha

Not a single dramatic moment — more like a Tuesday at 3pm when they realized they hadn't thought about performance on large databases — the lag is a betrayal in two weeks.”

pitchAPP-061
3 comments

The Pitch Deck Builder

A startup founder, sales director, or brand marketer who builds presentation decks that matter — investor pitches, sales proposals, quarterly business reviews. They chose Pitch because PowerPoint felt like 2005 and Google Slides felt like giving up on design. Pitch gives them templates that look professional and a collaborative workflow that doesn't require sending a file over email. They spend more time on decks than they'd like to admit. They care more about how those decks look than they'd admit in a meeting.

Aha

An investor meeting is in 48 hours.”

pitchAPP-175
3 comments

The Pitch Startup Storyteller

A startup founder, head of product, or strategy lead who creates presentations that need to look beautiful and tell a compelling story — investor decks, product roadmaps, board updates, customer pitches. They chose Pitch because it produces better-looking slides with less effort than PowerPoint or Google Slides. They value design defaults that make everything look good automatically. They collaborate in real time with co-founders and design team members. They are visual communicators who believe that how a story is presented is as important as the story itself.

Aha

It happened mid-workflow — the founder is preparing for a Series A fundraising round.”

tallyAPP-083
4 comments

The Tally Non-Technical Form Builder

A startup founder, indie maker, or operations person who creates forms for surveys, lead capture, applications, and feedback — and who bounced off Typeform's pricing, Google Forms' aesthetic, and Airtable Forms' rigidity. They found Tally and built their first form in 4 minutes. They converted immediately. They use Tally for things that other tools make too complicated or too expensive for what's essentially a box to collect information.

Aha

A teammate asked how they managed create a well-designed form fast without a mental model of how the tool works.”

beehiivAPP-007
6 comments

The Beehiiv Newsletter Operator

A newsletter founder, media operator, or content entrepreneur who runs a publication with 5,000–100,000 subscribers and treats it as a business with its own P&L, not a side project. They chose Beehiiv because it was built for operators — it has ad network access, referral programs, segmentation, and analytics that treat the newsletter as a product. They think in CAC, LTV, open rate, and click-to-open rate. They have a growth number they're working toward. They may or may not write the newsletter themselves.

Aha

They're in the monthly business review.”

notion-calendarAPP-054
6 comments

The Notion Calendar Unified Planner

A founder, PM, or knowledge worker who lives in Notion and has always felt the calendar app sitting separately as a second system that doesn't talk to the first. They adopted Notion Calendar because the promise — their calendar and their Notion workspace, unified — is the thing they've wanted for years. They're still calibrating how much of that promise is real. The answer is: more than Google Calendar, not yet everything they imagined.

Aha

The shift was quiet.”

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.”

attioAPP-006
3 comments

The Attio Revenue Operator

A revenue ops manager, head of sales, or technical founder at a startup of 10–100 people who evaluated the legacy CRMs and decided not to inherit their constraints. They chose Attio because it's data-model-first — they can define what a record means in their business rather than forcing their process into Salesforce's assumptions. They are building their CRM from scratch. This is a significant investment. They are aware of that and have decided it's worth it.

Aha

A teammate asked how they managed build a CRM that reflects their actual sales process rather than a generic framework.”

deelAPP-180
4 comments

The Deel Global Team Manager

An operations lead, HR manager, or founder at a remote-first company who has team members across 5–20 countries. They use Deel because hiring internationally is legally complex and paying people across borders is operationally painful. They manage contracts, process payments, and handle compliance for contractors and full-time employees in countries they've never visited. They've learned that "hiring remotely" really means "learning employment law for every country you hire in." Deel handles the parts they can't.

Aha

The shift was quiet.”

stripeAPP-116

The Stripe Platform Builder

A technical founder or senior developer building a platform where money flows between multiple parties — a marketplace, a SaaS with payouts, or a platform that onboards sellers. They chose Stripe because the API is good, but they've discovered that Stripe Connect is a different animal entirely. They understand payment intents but still get confused by the relationship between accounts, charges, and transfers. They are building financial infrastructure and it keeps them up at night.

Aha

The first time a seller on their platform got paid automatically — money flowed from buyer to platform to seller with the correct fee split, no manual step, no CSV export.”

supabaseAPP-130
4 comments

The Supabase Indie Hacker

A solo developer or indie hacker building a SaaS product where Supabase is the entire backend. They chose Supabase because it gives them Postgres, auth, storage, and real-time out of the box — and they can ship their MVP in a weekend instead of a month. They write SQL directly, use Row Level Security because they have to, and treat the Supabase dashboard as their admin panel. They are building a business alone and Supabase is the co-founder that handles the backend.

Aha

The shift was quiet.”

mintlifyAPP-112
4 comments

The Mintlify Developer Advocate

A developer advocate, DX engineer, or technical founder at a developer-facing company who chose Mintlify because they believed documentation was a product, not a document. They write docs in MDX. Their docs live in a git repository alongside their code. They ship documentation the same way they ship features: PR, review, merge, deploy. They care about the visual quality of their docs because they know developers judge a product by how it feels to learn it — and bad docs signal a bad API. They've recommended Mintlify to three other devrel teams. All three use it now.

Aha

The shift was quiet.”

clayAPP-011
5 comments

The Clay Growth Operator

A growth lead, revenue ops manager, or technical sales operator who found Clay and spent two weeks rebuilding their entire outbound motion around it. They were already combining data from LinkedIn, Apollo, Clearbit, and spreadsheets manually — a process that was slow, inconsistent, and unscalable. Clay collapsed that into one workflow. They now build outbound lists in hours that previously took weeks. They are evangelical about it. They're also aware that most people at their company don't understand what they've built.

Aha

The head of sales wants a list of 500 Series B SaaS companies that have posted a VP of Sales job in .”

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.”

google-analyticsAPP-034
3 comments

The Google Analytics Marketing Manager

A marketing manager or digital marketer at a company of 10–200 people who is responsible for understanding how the website is performing and why. They are not a data person. They've been through the GA4 migration and have not recovered emotionally. They know enough to navigate the interface but not enough to build custom reports without three tabs of documentation open. They check analytics several times a week and leave most sessions with more questions than answers.

Aha

The VP of Marketing wants to know if the new landing page is performing better than the old one.”

dropboxAPP-025
4 comments

The Dropbox Cross-Functional File Sharer

A project manager, creative director, or department lead at a company that produces large files — design assets, video, documents, presentations — that need to move between internal teams and external partners. They use Dropbox because it works for people who aren't on their company's Google or Microsoft stack. It's the lowest-friction way to get a 2GB folder to a client or vendor who uses a PC, a Mac, or a Linux box, and doesn't have access to their internal SharePoint.

Aha

A client has requested all source files from a project completed eight months ago.”

deelAPP-020
5 comments

The Deel Global HR Manager

An HR manager, people ops lead, or COO at a company of 20–200 people that has hired internationally — contractors in one country, full-time employees in another. Before Deel, this involved a law firm, a local accountant, a foreign entity, and a spreadsheet of exchange rates. Deel collapsed that. They can now hire in a new country in days instead of months. They are not naive about the complexity they're offloading — they understand that Deel is doing what they used to do badly.

Aha

They've found the right candidate for a senior engineering role.”

arcAPP-004
5 comments

The Arc Browser Power User

A developer, designer, or technical knowledge worker who switched to Arc and reorganized their browser-based work around Spaces and Folders instead of horizontal tab strips. They had 40 tabs open in Chrome on a normal day. They were managing them by scrolling and guilt. Arc replaced the tab strip with something structural. They have opinions about it that they've refined over 8 months of use. The opinion is: it's better. The caveat is: it requires learning a new mental model that takes 3 weeks to stop fighting.

Aha

The shift was quiet.”

clickupAPP-013
4 comments

The ClickUp Everything-App Operator

An operations manager, department head, or systems-minded project lead who chose ClickUp because they wanted one tool that could replace three. They were right that ClickUp could do this. They underestimated how long configuration would take. They have built a system that works well for them and is difficult to explain to new team members. They are aware that ClickUp's reputation for complexity is earned. They are also aware that the people who complain about it most haven't learned the difference between what's in the tool and what they actually need to turn on.

Aha

The shift was quiet.”

logseqAPP-110
4 comments

The Logseq Local-First Knowledge Builder

A researcher, developer, writer, or privacy-conscious knowledge worker who chose Logseq because their notes are plain `.md` files in a folder they control — not in a proprietary database, not in someone else's cloud. They care about data ownership in a specific way: not paranoia, but principle. They've watched tools sunset, pricing change, and export options degrade. Their Logseq graph syncs to iCloud or a private git repository. It will exist regardless of Logseq's future. They've also genuinely internalized the outliner-first paradigm. They think in bullets that can be linked and referenced anywhere else in the graph.

Aha

They're synthesizing research for a paper.”

roamAPP-195
4 comments

The Roam Research Networked Thinker

A writer, researcher, or knowledge worker who uses Roam Research as an extension of their thinking. They don't organize notes into folders — they write, link, and let the graph reveal connections. They use daily notes as their entry point, double-bracket references to build a web of ideas, and block references to connect thoughts across pages. They've read about Zettelkasten, spaced repetition, and evergreen notes. They've adopted some of these ideas and adapted others. They are building a thinking system, not a filing system.

Aha

Not a single dramatic moment — more like a Tuesday at 3pm when they realized they hadn't thought about performance degrades with large graphs — search and page loads slow down over time in two weeks.”

dropboxAPP-162
2 comments

The Dropbox Creative Team Manager

A creative director, design lead, or production manager who manages files for a creative team — designers, photographers, video editors, copywriters. They chose Dropbox because it handles large files (PSD, AI, video) better than Google Drive and because the desktop sync means creatives can work in their native apps without learning a new tool. They are the person who designs the folder structure, enforces naming conventions, and answers the question "where is the latest version of the logo?" at least three times a week.

Aha

The shift was quiet.”

amplitudeAPP-002
2 comments

The Amplitude Growth Analyst

A data analyst, growth analyst, or analytics engineer at a Series B–D company who owns Amplitude as the source of truth for product behavior. They are technical enough to write SQL but prefer not to for exploratory analysis. They've mastered the Amplitude chart types. They build dashboards that PMs and executives use but don't fully understand. They're the person in the room who says "let's look at the data" and then actually pulls it up.

Aha

The head of product wants to know which activation milestone most predicts 30-day retention.”

mixpanelAPP-051
6 comments

The Mixpanel Product Manager

A product manager or growth lead at a B2C or B2B SaaS company for whom Mixpanel is the primary lens on user behavior. They are not a developer. They understand events and properties well enough to answer most of their questions self-service. They have a set of saved reports they look at every Monday. They also have questions that require a data analyst to answer — and they're slowly working to reduce that list.

Aha

A teammate asked how they managed understand where users drop out of key flows and why.”

riversideAPP-071
3 comments

The Riverside Remote Podcast Host

A podcast host, interview show creator, or video podcast producer who records remote guests and has been burned enough times by Zoom audio artifacts that they moved their entire recording setup to Riverside. They care about sound quality in a way that most people around them don't understand. They've explained "local track recording" to three different guests and still have guests who join from a coffee shop with AirPods. They've made peace with this.

Aha

It happened mid-workflow — a major guest has agreed to record.”

salesforceAPP-072
6 comments

The Reluctant Salesforce User

An enterprise sales rep at a company with 200+ employees who did not choose Salesforce. It was there when they arrived. They've been trained on it twice. They use about 20% of its features and have found workarounds for everything else. They log activity because their manager checks. They update opportunities because forecasting requires it. They do not believe Salesforce makes them better at sales. They believe it makes their manager better at measuring sales.

Aha

The shift was quiet.”

grammarlyAPP-035
5 comments

The Grammarly Professional Writer

A professional writer, business analyst, marketer, or non-native English speaker for whom written communication is central to their professional credibility. They use Grammarly not because they can't write — they can — but because they write quickly and under pressure, and the gap between their intent and their output sometimes closes imperfectly. Grammarly is the layer that catches what their brain skips. For non-native speakers especially, it's the difference between writing with confidence and writing with anxiety.

Aha

It happened mid-workflow — they're writing a proposal to a new enterprise client.”

contentfulAPP-015
3 comments

The Contentful Content Manager

A content manager, digital editor, or marketing manager at a company with a developer-built Contentful implementation. They publish product pages, blog posts, campaign content, and documentation through Contentful's web interface. They did not design the content model — a developer did. They live inside that model every day and have a detailed understanding of which fields do what and which ones are a mystery. They are not a developer but they've learned to think in content types.

Aha

A teammate asked how they managed publish and update content quickly without waiting on a developer for every change.”

figmaAPP-114
3 comments

The Figma-to-Code Developer

A frontend or full-stack developer who didn't choose Figma but lives in it three hours a week. They open Figma to inspect designs, grab spacing values, export assets, and try to understand what the designer intended for edge cases that weren't mocked up. They've learned enough about auto-layout to know when a design will be painful to implement. They have opinions about design tokens that the design team doesn't want to hear yet.

Aha

A teammate asked how they managed extract exact spacing, color, and typography values without guessing.”

hotjarAPP-144
4 comments

The Hotjar UX Researcher

A UX researcher, product designer, or growth PM who uses Hotjar as their window into real user behavior. They watch session recordings to understand confusion, analyze heatmaps to validate layout decisions, and run micro-surveys to capture user sentiment in context. They are the person on the team who says "let me check what users are actually doing" before anyone makes a design decision based on assumptions. They think in user journeys, not funnels.

Aha

The shift was quiet.”

liveblocksAPP-184
4 comments

The Liveblocks Real-Time Developer

A frontend developer who needs to add real-time collaboration to an existing app — live cursors, presence indicators, shared document editing, or collaborative whiteboards. They chose Liveblocks because building WebSocket infrastructure from scratch is a project in itself, and they need to ship the feature, not the infrastructure. They understand React, they understand state management, and Liveblocks extends those mental models to multiplayer. They are building the "Google Docs" experience for their product.

Aha

It happened mid-workflow — the developer is adding collaborative editing to a project management tool.”

flyioAPP-030
4 comments

The Fly.io Container Developer

A backend or full-stack developer who needs to run server-side applications — not just static sites and serverless functions — and wants them deployed globally without managing Kubernetes or paying for managed Kubernetes overhead. They found Fly.io and found a platform that takes a Dockerfile and runs it near users. They `fly deploy`. It works. They have opinions about Fly.io that include real affection and specific frustrations, which is the relationship one has with a platform they actually depend on.

Aha

It happened mid-workflow — they're deploying a Phoenix application — Elixir, with WebSockets and a persistent database connecti.”

notion-aiAPP-167
3 comments

The Notion AI Content Strategist

A content strategist, knowledge manager, or team lead who uses Notion AI as part of their daily workflow inside Notion. They don't use it to write blog posts from scratch — they use it to summarize 45-minute meeting transcripts into action items, turn rough notes into structured documents, answer questions about information buried in the team's wiki, and draft from templates. They've found the sweet spot: AI handles the structure, they handle the thinking.

Aha

The shift was quiet.”

codaAPP-168
4 comments

The Coda Doc Builder

A team lead, ops manager, or product manager who uses Coda to build interactive documents that are half-doc, half-app. They've built meeting note trackers with automated action items, sprint planning boards with voting buttons, and OKR trackers with progress rollups — all inside Coda docs. They chose Coda because Notion didn't have formulas and Airtable didn't have documents. They love that everything lives in one place. They worry that they've built something only they understand.

Aha

Not a single dramatic moment — more like a Tuesday at 3pm when they realized they hadn't thought about formula complexity escalates quickly — what starts as a simple lookup becomes a nested formula chain in two weeks.”

heightAPP-111
4 comments

The Height Engineering Team Lead

An engineering team lead or technical PM at a company of 20–150 people who evaluated Linear and wanted more — more project hierarchy, more cross-functional visibility, more flexibility for non-engineering teams to work alongside engineering in the same tool. They chose Height. They're building their system in it. They like that it feels like a tool built by people who understand engineering workflows, not a project management tool that engineering is expected to tolerate. They're still learning the edges of it.

Aha

It happened mid-workflow — sprint planning is Monday.”

zapierAPP-091
6 comments

The Zapier Non-Technical Automator

An operations coordinator, marketing manager, or executive assistant who discovered Zapier and spent an afternoon automating a task that had been eating 45 minutes of their week. That experience was formative. They now have 12 Zaps running, three of which they fully understand, one of which they're afraid to touch, and one that they know has been broken for two weeks but the fix intimidates them. They are not a developer. They are the closest thing to one in their department.

Aha

Not a single dramatic moment — more like a Tuesday at 3pm when they realized they hadn't thought about error messages that tell them a Zap failed but not what to do about it in two weeks.”

salesforceAPP-127
3 comments

The Salesforce Admin

A business analyst, operations manager, or former power user who became the Salesforce admin because they were the person who understood the data best. They don't write code — they build Flows, create reports, manage permissions, and configure the org to match how the business actually works. They have 3–5 Trailhead certifications and a bookmark folder of Salesforce Help articles they reference weekly. They are simultaneously the most important and most under-appreciated person in the revenue organization.

Aha

Not a single dramatic moment — more like a Tuesday at 3pm when they realized they hadn't thought about flow Builder that's powerful but crashes on complex flows and has limited debugging in two weeks.”

codaAPP-014
5 comments

The Coda Ops and Strategy Builder

An operations manager, strategy lead, or chief of staff who discovered that the documents they needed didn't fit neatly into either a Google Doc or a spreadsheet. They found Coda and spent two weeks building something they couldn't have built elsewhere — a doc with a database inside it, buttons that trigger actions, and views that update automatically. They are evangelical about it in proportion to how many people they've tried to explain it to. It's hard to explain until you see it.

Aha

Not a single dramatic moment — more like a Tuesday at 3pm when they realized they hadn't thought about the learning curve that separates people who "get" Coda from people who bounce off it in two weeks.”

descriptAPP-150
3 comments

The Descript Content Creator

A content creator, podcaster, or YouTuber who discovered that editing video by editing text is the workflow they always wanted. They are not a professional video editor — they are a creator who needs to edit video. They record long-form content and use Descript to clean it up: remove filler words, cut dead air, generate highlights, and export polished clips. They've tried Premiere and DaVinci Resolve but found the timeline-based editing paradigm unnecessary for talking-head and interview content.

Aha

A teammate asked how they managed edit video and audio by editing the transcript — cut a sentence, cut the video.”

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.”

pendoAPP-152
4 comments

The Pendo Product Manager

A product manager at a B2B SaaS company who uses Pendo as both their analytics platform and their in-app communication tool. They track feature adoption, build onboarding guides, run NPS surveys, and analyze user paths — all without filing engineering tickets. They appreciate that Pendo lets them own the user communication layer. They've become the person who says "let's add a guide for that" whenever a feature has low adoption, and they're starting to wonder if they've created guide fatigue.

Aha

It happened mid-workflow — the PM launches a new dashboard feature.”

zapierAPP-123
4 comments

The Zapier Power Automator

A RevOps lead, marketing ops specialist, or operations manager who has become their company's automation architect without the title. They've connected 15–30 apps through Zapier and built workflows that the entire company depends on but nobody else understands. They started with simple two-step Zaps and now build multi-step workflows with filters, paths, formatters, and webhooks. They are the person who gets called when "something stopped working" — which means a Zap failed and nobody noticed until the damage was done.

Aha

A teammate asked how they managed build multi-step automations that handle edge cases without breaking.”

apolloAPP-194
3 comments

The Apollo Sales Development Rep

A sales development representative or outbound sales rep at a B2B company who uses Apollo as their prospecting command center. They build prospect lists from Apollo's database, enroll them in email sequences, track opens and replies, and try to book meetings. They send 50–200 outreach emails per day and know that personalization is the difference between a reply and the spam folder. They are a relationship builder working at volume, and they've developed an intuition for which prospects will respond and which won't.

Aha

The shift was quiet.”

squarespaceAPP-077
4 comments

The Squarespace Small Business Owner

A photographer, therapist, consultant, restaurant owner, or small retailer who built their own website on Squarespace because it was the best option they could manage independently. They are not a developer. They do not want to be. They want a website that looks professional, is easy to update, and doesn't require a support ticket to change the menu. They've succeeded at this mostly. There are two things on their site that have been wrong for three months because fixing them would require understanding something they don't want to learn.

Aha

The shift was quiet.”

midjourneyAPP-172
3 comments

The Midjourney Visual Creator

A creative professional — designer, art director, marketer, or content creator — who has integrated Midjourney into their production workflow. They don't generate random images for fun; they craft prompts with precision to produce specific visual outcomes: hero images for landing pages, mood boards for brand development, concept art for product pitches, and social media visuals. They've developed a prompt vocabulary that gets consistent results. They understand that AI art isn't "pushing a button" — it's iterating, refining, and curating from dozens of generations.

Aha

Not a single dramatic moment — more like a Tuesday at 3pm when they realized they hadn't thought about consistent brand characters and specific product representations are still unreliable in two weeks.”

mixpanelAPP-132
4 comments

The Mixpanel Product Analyst

A product analyst or data analyst embedded in a product team who uses Mixpanel as their primary tool for understanding user behavior. They build funnels, analyze retention, and create the dashboards that PMs reference in every planning meeting. They know SQL but prefer Mixpanel's UI for speed. They've named every event in the tracking plan and written documentation for each one. They are the person the PM turns to and asks "are users actually using this feature?" — and they always have the answer.

Aha

A teammate asked how they managed build funnels that accurately capture user journeys from signup to activation to retention.”

prismaAPP-063
4 comments

The Prisma TypeScript Developer

A backend or full-stack developer working primarily in TypeScript who uses Prisma as their database interface and considers the Prisma schema file to be the authoritative source of truth for their data model. They came from raw SQL, or from another ORM, and found that Prisma's type generation changed how they think about database access — not as a string-query problem but as a typed function call where the compiler tells them when something is wrong before it runs. They have strong feelings about the Prisma schema. Those feelings are mostly fond.

Aha

The shift was quiet.”

twilioAPP-138
4 comments

The Twilio Communications Builder

A backend developer or full-stack engineer who integrates Twilio for transactional SMS, voice calls, or WhatsApp messaging. They're not building a call center — they're adding "send a verification code" or "notify the driver" to an existing product. They understand the API well enough to send messages, but the telecom layer underneath — carrier filtering, number provisioning, regulatory compliance — feels like a different industry entirely. They write code that talks to phones, and they've learned that phones are unreliable in ways servers are not.

Aha

The developer ships a phone verification flow.”

drataAPP-173
4 comments

The Drata Compliance Automation Lead

A security engineer, compliance lead, or CTO at a startup who needs SOC 2, ISO 27001, or HIPAA compliance to close enterprise deals. They chose Drata because the alternative was spreadsheets, manual evidence collection, and $50K in consultant fees. They've connected their cloud infrastructure, HR tools, and code repositories to Drata for automated evidence collection. They understand that compliance is a business requirement, not a security one — the real security work is separate. They are simultaneously grateful for automation and frustrated by how much manual work remains.

Aha

A teammate asked how they managed automate evidence collection across cloud infrastructure, identity providers, and HR systems.”

supabaseAPP-081
6 comments

The Supabase Full-Stack Developer

A full-stack developer or indie hacker who uses Supabase as their backend and thinks of it as their database, their auth layer, their file storage, and their API layer at once. They came from Firebase and wanted Postgres. Or they came from setting up their own Postgres and wanted the tooling. Either way they arrived at Supabase and found a backend they could move on from thinking about. They write SQL fluently. They use Row Level Security. They are deeply comfortable in the Supabase dashboard. They have strong feelings about their Supabase tables.

Aha

The shift was quiet.”

runwayAPP-109
3 comments

The Runway AI Video Editor

A video editor, creative director, or content producer who has integrated Runway into their professional workflow — not as a novelty, but as a production tool that changes what's achievable in a given timeline and budget. They use Runway for AI video generation, background removal, inpainting, motion tracking, and generative effects that would require a VFX team or days of Premiere work otherwise. They have a traditional video editing background. They understand the craft. They are not using Runway to replace craft — they're using it to expand what they can produce without expanding the team or the deadline.

Aha

Not a single dramatic moment — more like a Tuesday at 3pm when they realized they hadn't thought about consistency across generated clips — maintaining visual coherence between in two weeks.”

slackAPP-076
7 comments

The Slack-Drowning Knowledge Worker

A full-time knowledge worker — marketer, PM, ops, customer success — at a company large enough that Slack has become the ambient noise of their workday. They didn't design the channel structure they live in. They inherited it. They have 12 unread DMs, are mentioned in 3 channels they rarely check, and have muted so many channels that important things occasionally slip through the cracks. They're not bad at their job. They're bad at Slack because Slack has become its own job.

Aha

It happened mid-workflow — it's 10am.”

vscodeAPP-088
6 comments

The VS Code Full-Stack Developer

A full-stack developer with 2–10 years of experience for whom VS Code is the primary tool of their craft — the place they spend most of their working day. They have a VS Code configuration that took months to arrive at and that they bring to every new machine. They know their extensions. They know their keybindings. They have an opinion about whether Prettier should run on save. Their editor is not the default installation — it's a reflection of how they think about working.

Aha

A teammate asked how they managed stay in flow state — the editor should get out of the way and let them write.”

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.”

notionAPP-115
3 comments

The Notion Workspace Admin

A team lead, chief of staff, or ops person who became the unofficial Notion admin because they were the first person to organize anything in the workspace. They've built the team wiki, the project tracker template, and the onboarding guide. They spend more time maintaining the structure of Notion than using it for their actual job. They live in fear of someone moving a page to the wrong section and breaking every linked database.

Aha

A new team member joins and asks where to find the product roadmap.”

cursorAPP-018
6 comments

The Cursor AI-Native Developer

A software developer with 2–10 years of experience who switched to Cursor after a trial period and didn't go back. They've restructured how they code around the assumption that AI is in the loop. They write less boilerplate. They spend more time reviewing and directing than typing. They're faster on unfamiliar codebases than they've ever been. They're also developing opinions about when AI help hurts — about the kinds of errors that look right until they don't.

Aha

The shift was quiet.”

linearAPP-043
6 comments

The Linear Startup Engineer

A software engineer at a startup of 10–100 people who has used Jira and has Opinions. They switched to Linear — or advocated for switching — because it's fast, opinionated, and built for people who care about the work rather than the process around it. They use Linear every day to track their own work, manage issues, and follow the work of their small team. The keyboard shortcuts aren't optional to them — they're the point.

Aha

They're back from a two-day sprint on a difficult bug.”

liveblocksAPP-045
4 comments

The Liveblocks Collaboration Developer

A frontend or full-stack developer at a SaaS company whose product needs real-time collaboration — multiple users working in the same document, canvas, or interface simultaneously. They've looked at building it themselves. The WebSocket infrastructure, the conflict resolution, the presence system, the storage — it's 3–6 months of work that isn't their product. They chose Liveblocks to compress that into a week. They are now the person at their company who knows how Liveblocks works. This is a niche form of expertise they didn't expect to develop.

Aha

The shift was quiet.”

substackAPP-080
2 comments

The Substack Independent Writer

A journalist, essayist, researcher, or domain expert who chose to publish directly to an audience rather than through a publication that owns the relationship. They've been on Substack for 1–4 years. They have a free list and a paid tier. They take the writing seriously. They also think about the business of the writing — open rates, growth, conversion from free to paid — more than they expected to when they started. They are doing something that didn't exist at scale five years ago and they feel the weight and freedom of that simultaneously.

Aha

It happened mid-workflow — they've been on Substack for 18 months.”

hotjarAPP-093
6 comments

The Hotjar Session Watcher

A product manager, growth marketer, or UX designer at a company of 20–500 people who uses Hotjar to answer questions that quantitative analytics can't. They know their funnel. They know where users drop off. What they don't know is why. Session recordings are how they find out. They've watched hundreds of sessions. They've seen users rage-click on things that aren't buttons, scroll past CTAs without seeing them, and get confused by flows the team thought were obvious. Each one of these is a design decision waiting to happen.

Aha

The checkout conversion rate dropped 2.”

resendAPP-068
5 comments

The Resend Transactional Email Developer

A full-stack or backend developer who needs to send transactional emails — password resets, welcome emails, order confirmations, notifications — from their application. They chose Resend because the developer experience felt like it was designed for someone who writes code, not someone who uses a drag-and-drop email builder. They write their email templates in React. The API is simple enough that they memorized it. They are not thinking about email infrastructure. They are thinking about their product.

Aha

The shift was quiet.”

sentryAPP-094
6 comments

The Sentry Error Monitor

A backend, frontend, or full-stack developer at a product company for whom Sentry is the first place they look when something goes wrong in production. They didn't set Sentry up — it was already there when they joined — but they've learned to read its output. They've been paged because of a Sentry alert. They've traced a production incident back to a specific line using Sentry's stack traces. They've also spent 40 minutes investigating a Sentry error that turned out to be a bot making malformed requests. They've learned to filter.

Aha

It happened mid-workflow — it's Wednesday afternoon.”

pendoAPP-057
4 comments

The Pendo Product Manager

A product manager at a B2B SaaS company who owns feature adoption and in-app user education. They have engineering bandwidth for product, not for tooltips. Pendo lets them publish in-app guides without a ticket. They've also realized that Pendo's analytics tell them something different from their product analytics tool — not better, different. Pendo tells them where users are, not just what they do.

Aha

A major new feature shipped three weeks ago.”

fullstoryAPP-108
6 comments

The FullStory Behavioral Analytics PM

A senior product manager, digital experience lead, or data-savvy UX researcher at a company of 200–5,000 people where FullStory was purchased as a platform — not a point tool. They use it to answer questions that neither analytics dashboards nor individual session recordings can answer alone: what does the full behavioral pattern look like for users who churn? Where in the enterprise checkout flow do users consistently struggle? Which UI elements are generating frustration signals at scale? They work with data. They also watch sessions. Both inform the decision.

Aha

The shift was quiet.”

makeAPP-048
4 comments

The Make Power Automator

An operations lead, automation specialist, or technical non-developer who moved to Make (formerly Integromat) after hitting the ceiling on Zapier. They know what they wanted to build and Zapier's linear trigger-action model couldn't do it: conditional branches, iterators, error handlers, multi-route flows. Make could. They learned Make. They have built things in Make that non-technical people would describe as software and technical people would describe as creative. They exist in the middle of the developer-to-non-developer spectrum and they've built a practice there.

Aha

A client needs a system: when a new deal is created in HubSpot above a certain value, create a proje.”

pikaAPP-198
4 comments

The Pika Video Creator

A social media manager, content creator, or marketer who uses Pika to generate short video clips for social media, ads, and content marketing. They're not a video editor — they're a marketer who needs video content faster than traditional production allows. They type descriptions and get video clips. They use image-to-video for product animations. They create motion graphics from static designs. They've learned that "good enough for social" is a valid quality bar, and Pika hits it in minutes instead of hours.

Aha

It happened mid-workflow — the social media manager needs 5 short clips for the week's content calendar.”

cursorAPP-135
4 comments

The Cursor AI-Native Developer

A developer who has made Cursor their primary IDE and restructured their workflow around AI-assisted coding. They don't use AI as autocomplete — they use it as a pair programmer, architect, and refactoring partner. They've learned which prompts work, which context windows matter, and when to trust the AI vs. when to verify manually. They are faster than they were in VS Code, but they've also developed new anxieties about code they didn't fully write.

Aha

The shift was quiet.”

wixAPP-174
4 comments

The Wix Small Business Builder

A small business owner — a personal trainer, a photographer, a bakery, an accountant — who built their website on Wix because they could drag and drop their way to something that looked professional enough. They aren't designers. They aren't developers. They are business owners who need an online presence. They picked a template, moved things around until it looked right, added their text and photos, and hit publish. They update it when they remember to. It's not perfect, but it exists, and it brings in customers.

Aha

A potential client searches "photographer near me" and finds the business owner's Wix site on the second page of Google.”

docusignAPP-159
3 comments

The DocuSign Legal Operations Manager

A legal operations manager, contracts administrator, or legal team member responsible for the organization's DocuSign implementation. They manage templates, set up signing workflows, and make sure contracts go through the right approval chains. They're the person who built the NDA template, the SOW template, and the vendor agreement template. They field requests like "I need this signed by Friday" and translate them into proper DocuSign envelopes with the right fields, routing, and compliance settings. They are the API between the legal team and everyone else who needs something signed.

Aha

Not a single dramatic moment — more like a Tuesday at 3pm when they realized they hadn't thought about template management becomes unwieldy as the library grows — versioning and deprecation are manual processes in two weeks.”

heightAPP-187
2 comments

The Height Autonomous Project Tracker

A product team lead or engineering manager at a startup who chose Height because it promised what every PM secretly wants: a project tracker that maintains itself. They use Height's AI features to auto-triage bug reports, suggest task labels, and identify duplicate issues. They still do the strategic work — prioritization, sprint planning, roadmap decisions — but the administrative overhead of keeping the tracker clean is lower than with Jira or Linear. They are cautiously optimistic about AI in project management — it works 75% of the time, and the 25% it doesn't requires less effort to fix than doing it all manually.

Aha

A teammate asked how they managed reduce the time spent on task triage, labeling, and organization by 50% with AI assistance.”

readwiseAPP-170
4 comments

The Readwise Knowledge Synthesizer

A voracious reader — books, articles, newsletters, podcasts, Twitter threads — who realized that reading without capturing is forgetting. They use Readwise to collect highlights from Kindle, Instapaper, podcasts, and the web, then Readwise Reader for their daily reading queue. They've built a workflow where everything they consume flows through one system, highlights are tagged and resurfaced, and insights compound over time. They are the person who can always find "that article I read about X" because they highlighted the key passage six months ago.

Aha

It happened mid-workflow — the knowledge worker is writing a strategy memo about pricing models.”

raycastAPP-157
3 comments

The Raycast Workflow Automator

A developer or technical power user on macOS who has made Raycast the nerve center of their computing workflow. They don't just launch apps — they manage clipboard history, control Spotify, search GitHub issues, translate text, convert currencies, and run custom scripts — all from a single keyboard shortcut. They've installed 15–30 extensions and written a few of their own. They are the person whose colleagues watch them work and ask "what is that tool and how do I get it." They measure productivity in keystrokes saved.

Aha

It happened mid-workflow — the developer starts their day.”

intercomAPP-128
4 comments

The Intercom Support Lead

A customer support lead or manager who runs their team's entire operation through Intercom. They built the macro library, set up the routing rules, and configured the chatbot — all while also jumping into the inbox during peak hours. They measure first response time, resolution time, and CSAT obsessively. They believe in automation but hate when it makes customers feel like nobody's listening. They are the bridge between what the product team ships and what customers actually experience.

Aha

A teammate asked how they managed keep first response time under 5 minutes during business hours.”

framerAPP-146
4 comments

The Framer Motion Designer

A product designer or motion designer who gravitates toward Framer because it treats animation and interaction as first-class design elements. They don't just design screens — they design how screens transition, how elements respond to hover, how content enters and exits. They've used Figma for static design but find it limiting when the design's value is in how it moves. They are the person who insists that the ease curve matters and that a 200ms delay feels different from a 300ms delay.

Aha

A teammate asked how they managed design and prototype complex animations and transitions that developers would struggle to implement from specs.”

ripplingAPP-166
4 comments

The Rippling HR Administrator

An HR administrator, people ops manager, or office manager at a 50–500 person company who manages Rippling as their all-in-one HR platform. They handle onboarding (IT provisioning, payroll setup, benefits enrollment), offboarding (access revocation, final paycheck, COBRA), and everything in between. They chose Rippling because the alternative was stitching together 5 separate tools. They appreciate the unified system but have learned that "all-in-one" means "all the complexity in one place." They are the person who makes sure new hires have a laptop, a paycheck, and health insurance on day one.

Aha

It happened mid-workflow — a new engineer starts Monday.”

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