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.

8
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.”

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.”

posthogAPP-134
3 comments

The PostHog Growth Engineer

A growth engineer, product engineer, or technical PM who uses PostHog as their all-in-one growth stack — analytics, feature flags, A/B tests, session replay. They chose PostHog because they didn't want to stitch together Amplitude, LaunchDarkly, and Hotjar. They think in funnels, retention curves, and statistical significance. They are technical enough to self-serve but product-minded enough to care about the "so what" behind the data.

Aha

It happened mid-workflow — the growth engineer is running an A/B test on the onboarding flow.”

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.”

fullstoryAPP-197
3 comments

The FullStory Digital Experience Analyst

A product analyst or UX researcher at a digital product company who uses FullStory as their lens into the user experience. They don't just look at funnels and conversion rates — they watch sessions, identify frustration signals (rage clicks, dead clicks, error clicks), and correlate behavioral patterns with business outcomes. They've learned to find the story in the data: why conversions dropped, where users get confused, what makes the checkout feel broken. They are the translator between raw user behavior and product decisions.

Aha

The product team sees a 15% drop in checkout completion after a recent redesign.”

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.”

posthogAPP-062
5 comments

The PostHog Product Engineer

A product engineer or full-stack developer at a startup of 5–50 people who chose PostHog — or advocated for it — because they wanted product analytics that behave like engineering tools. They self-host or use PostHog Cloud. They instrument events themselves. They use feature flags as part of their development workflow. They are not a data analyst but they want to be able to answer product questions without filing a request to one.

Aha

It happened mid-workflow — they've shipped a new onboarding flow behind a feature flag to 10% of users.”

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.”

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