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.

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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.”

grammarlyAPP-161
4 comments

The Grammarly Professional Writer

A content writer, communications manager, or marketing professional who writes 3,000–10,000 words per week — blog posts, emails, reports, social copy. They don't need Grammarly to tell them "their vs. there." They use it for the subtle stuff: passive voice creep, sentences that technically make sense but are hard to read, tone shifts that happen when they're tired, and the comma they always second-guess. They've learned to accept some Grammarly suggestions automatically and reject others consistently. They have a relationship with the tool.

Aha

It happened mid-workflow — the writer is finishing a 2,500-word blog post.”

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