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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figma-dev-modeAPP-028
4 comments

The Figma Dev Mode Engineer

A frontend engineer at a product company who implements UI from Figma designs. Dev Mode is their interface to the design file — the layer of Figma that was built for them rather than around them. They use it to extract measurements, inspect component properties, copy CSS values, and verify that what they've built matches what was designed. They have strong feelings about when Dev Mode helps and when it's still faster to ask the designer. Those feelings are specific.

Aha

Not a single dramatic moment — more like a Tuesday at 3pm when they realized they hadn't thought about cSS output that assumes a different architecture than the codebase they're working in in two weeks.”

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.”

figmaAPP-029
6 comments

The Figma Product Designer

A mid-to-senior product designer at a tech company with 3–8 years of experience. Figma is where they spend most of their working day — from rough explorations to polished specs. They work across a shared team library and collaborate with PMs in comments and engineers in dev mode. They are fast, opinionated about component architecture, and quietly frustrated by how the tools around Figma still slow everything down.

Aha

A teammate asked how they managed move from concept to spec without losing fidelity at each stage.”

riveAPP-102
4 comments

The Rive Interactive Animation Designer

A designer or creative developer who builds animations that respond to state, not just ones that play and loop. They discovered Rive when they realized that Lottie was great for playing animations but couldn't handle the "and then when the user clicks, it does this" requirement. Rive's state machine changed their practice. They now build animations that are interactive first — hover states, press states, loading-to-success transitions, character rigs that respond to game input. They are comfortable in both the design and the runtime.

Aha

It happened mid-workflow — they're building a loading animation for a fintech app.”

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.”

roamAPP-098
2 comments

The Roam Research Networked Thinker

A researcher, academic, writer, or knowledge-intensive professional who uses Roam because it is the only tool that treats the connection between ideas as a first-class object. They write in Daily Notes. They [[bracket]] everything. They have a graph with 3,000–15,000 nodes that they've been building for 2–4 years. They know their graph is their most valuable intellectual asset. They also know that Roam's development has slowed, that the tool has rough edges, and that they've considered migrating to Obsidian or Logseq at least twice. They haven't migrated. The switching cost is partly the data — mostly the habit.

Aha

They're writing an essay about institutional memory.”

gustoAPP-178
4 comments

The Gusto Payroll Administrator

An office manager, operations person, or small business owner at a 5–50 person company who runs payroll through Gusto. They're not an HR professional — they're the person who ended up doing payroll because someone had to. They learned Gusto's interface, set up direct deposit, configured PTO policies, and now they run payroll every two weeks with the quiet anxiety of someone who knows that a payroll mistake means an employee doesn't pay their rent on time. They appreciate Gusto's simplicity but still double-check every run.

Aha

A teammate asked how they managed run payroll accurately every cycle with minimal manual input.”

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