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.

48
stripeAPP-079
3 comments

The Stripe Integration Developer

A full-stack or backend developer at a startup or mid-size company who built and maintains the Stripe integration for their product. They integrated Stripe once — it took a week in dev, two days in staging, and then went live and mostly just worked. Now they're the person who gets the Slack message when a payment fails. They know the Stripe docs well enough to find what they need. They have a complicated relationship with webhooks.

Aha

A teammate asked how they managed understand what happened when a payment fails before the customer reaches support.”

makeAPP-169
4 comments

The Make Integration Architect

An automation specialist, operations engineer, or technical ops manager who builds complex workflows in Make because Zapier wasn't enough. They connect 10–30 tools with branching logic, iterators, aggregators, error handlers, and data transformations. They build automations that look like flowcharts, not if-then rules. They've learned Make's visual interface deeply — routers, filters, webhooks, custom HTTP modules. They are the person who automates what everyone else does manually, and they take quiet pride in systems that run for months without intervention.

Aha

A teammate asked how they managed build multi-step automations with branching logic that handles different cases (approval/rejection, success/failure).”

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.”

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.”

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.”

segmentAPP-074
4 comments

The Segment Data Engineer

A data engineer or analytics engineer at a tech company for whom Segment is the central nervous system of the data stack. Every tool the company uses for analytics, marketing, and customer success gets its data through Segment. They did not design the original tracking plan. They inherited it. They've been cleaning it up for eight months. It will take eight more. They are the person who gets paged when an event stops flowing.

Aha

A teammate asked how they managed maintain a clean, consistent event schema that all downstream tools can rely on.”

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.”

apolloAPP-003
5 comments

The Apollo SDR

A sales development rep or account executive at a B2B company of 20–300 people who runs outbound prospecting as a core job function. Apollo is their prospecting database, their sequencing engine, and their activity tracker. They use it every day. They've built sequences that work and sequences that don't, and they've learned the difference by watching reply rates. They're not sentimental about approaches that aren't working. They test, they iterate, they move on.

Aha

It happened mid-workflow — it's Monday.”

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.”

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.”

typeformAPP-086
6 comments

The Typeform Research and Marketing User

A UX researcher, marketer, or operations person who uses Typeform because they've seen what happens to completion rates when you use Google Forms. They care about the quality of the responses they collect — which means they care about the experience of filling in the form. They design forms deliberately: question order, logic branches, conversational tone. They know their completion rate. They have an opinion about it.

Aha

The shift was quiet.”

craftAPP-017
3 comments

The Craft Docs Intentional Writer

A product manager, writer, consultant, or knowledge worker who uses Craft as their primary document and note environment because it is the only tool that takes both writing and structure seriously at the same time. They're on Apple devices — Mac and iPhone, usually iPad. They've tried Notion (too database-y), Bear (too simple), Obsidian (too much tinkering), and Apple Notes (not embarrassed about this, just limited). Craft is what they settled on. The fact that it looks good is not superficial to them — environment affects their thinking.

Aha

It happened mid-workflow — they're preparing a strategy document for a quarterly review.”

twilioAPP-085
3 comments

The Twilio Communications Developer

A backend or full-stack developer at a startup or mid-size company who built the Twilio integration that handles customer-facing communications — appointment reminders, verification codes, order updates, or two-way SMS. They did the integration once. It worked. Now they're the person who gets paged when a customer says they didn't receive their verification code, and they have to determine whether that's a Twilio problem, a code problem, or a carrier problem — in that order.

Aha

It happened mid-workflow — three customers have filed support tickets saying they didn't receive their OTP.”

kajabiAPP-042
6 comments

The Kajabi Course Creator

A course creator, coach, consultant, or subject matter expert who chose Kajabi because they wanted one platform instead of five. They have a course, probably a coaching program, possibly a membership community, and they wanted all of it to live together with one checkout, one email system, one analytics dashboard. They pay more for this than they would if they stitched together cheaper tools. They've decided that simplicity and integration are worth the difference. The Kajabi community is genuinely part of their decision — knowing that tens of thousands of other creators are building on the same infrastructure.

Aha

A teammate asked how they managed run a profitable online education business without managing multiple platforms.”

gitlabAPP-145
4 comments

The GitLab DevOps Engineer

A DevOps engineer or platform engineer who chose GitLab because the promise of "one tool for the entire DevOps lifecycle" was too compelling to ignore. They manage the CI/CD pipelines, configure the runners, set up the security scanning, and maintain the deployment workflows. They appreciate that everything lives in one place — no integrating GitHub with CircleCI with Snyk with ArgoCD. But they've also learned that "one tool that does everything" sometimes means "one tool that does everything at 80%."

Aha

Not a single dramatic moment — more like a Tuesday at 3pm when they realized they hadn't thought about cI pipeline configuration in YAML becomes deeply nested and hard to maintain as complexity grows in two weeks.”

drataAPP-024
4 comments

The Drata Compliance Manager

A security manager, compliance lead, or IT director at a SaaS company of 50–500 people who is responsible for achieving and maintaining SOC 2 Type II certification. Before Drata, this was a spreadsheet, a shared drive, and a six-month audit season that consumed 30% of their capacity. Drata made it something they can manage in the background with periodic attention spikes. They're not relaxed about compliance — that would be naive — but they're less reactive. That's the win.

Aha

A teammate asked how they managed maintain continuous compliance evidence without a manual collection sprint before every audit.”

asanaAPP-131
4 comments

The Asana Project Coordinator

A project coordinator, program manager, or PMO lead who uses Asana to keep cross-functional projects on track. They don't do the work — they make sure the work gets done. They manage timelines, dependencies, and status updates across teams that each have their own Asana projects, their own workflows, and their own definitions of "on track." They are the person in every meeting who asks "what's the status?" and "who owns this?" — and they need Asana to give them those answers without asking.

Aha

Not a single dramatic moment — more like a Tuesday at 3pm when they realized they hadn't thought about portfolios that show project status but not the why — "at risk" doesn't explain the blocker in two weeks.”

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.”

framerAPP-031
5 comments

The Framer Interactive Designer

A product designer or creative developer who uses Framer for either high-fidelity interactive prototypes or production marketing sites — often both. They came from Figma and knew it wasn't built for interaction. They came from Webflow and wanted more design control. Framer sits between those two worlds and they've made it home. They are comfortable with the code escape hatch. They don't use it unless they have to. When they have to, they can.

Aha

The shift was quiet.”

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.”

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.”

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.”

prismaAPP-151
4 comments

The Prisma ORM Developer

A TypeScript or Node.js backend developer who uses Prisma as their ORM. They chose it because the type safety and auto-generated client make database interactions feel like writing TypeScript, not SQL. They've come to depend on the schema-first workflow — define the schema, generate the client, write queries with full autocomplete. But they've also hit the wall where the ORM can't express what they need, and they have to drop down to raw SQL with a guilty feeling, like they're breaking the abstraction.

Aha

The developer is building a leaderboard feature that requires ranking users by score within time windows, with pagination.”

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.”

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.”

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.”

contentfulAPP-147
4 comments

The Contentful Headless CMS Developer

A frontend or full-stack developer who integrates Contentful as the content backend for a website, app, or digital experience. They set up the content models, build the delivery layer, and create the bridge between what content editors want to publish and what the frontend can render. They appreciate the API-first approach but have learned that "headless" means they're responsible for everything the CMS traditionally handled — routing, preview, caching, image optimization. They build the head.

Aha

A marketing team wants to launch a new campaign page type.”

jiraAPP-121
4 comments

The Jira Engineering Manager

An engineering manager leading a team of 5–15 developers. They use Jira because the company chose it years ago and migration would be worse than staying. They plan sprints, groom backlogs, and build the reports their VP needs for quarterly reviews. They know Jira's power but resent its complexity. They've customized their board exactly once and now they're afraid to touch it. They protect their team from Jira overhead by doing most of the admin work themselves.

Aha

The shift was quiet.”

runwayAPP-192
4 comments

The Runway AI Video Producer

A video producer, creative director, or content creator who has integrated Runway into their production workflow. They use it for practical production tasks: generating b-roll from text prompts, extending clips that are a few seconds too short, removing backgrounds without green screens, and creating concept videos for client approval before shooting. They are not experimenting with AI video for fun — they are using it to solve production problems that were previously solved by money, time, or compromise.

Aha

A marketing team needs a 30-second concept video for a product launch.”

obsidianAPP-056
5 comments

The Obsidian PKM Builder

A researcher, writer, software developer, or knowledge worker who has built their second brain in Obsidian and means it. They write in Markdown. They link notes intentionally. They have a vault structure they've iterated on at least twice. They use the graph view occasionally, for the pleasure of seeing their thinking made visible, not because it's the most useful view. They've installed 8–20 plugins. They have strong opinions about the right way to take notes, opinions that evolved over two years of using the wrong way.

Aha

A teammate asked how they managed capture ideas in a format that connects them to related ideas automatically.”

pikaAPP-060
6 comments

The Pika AI Video Creator

A content creator, marketing director, or creative professional who has integrated AI video generation into their content workflow. They use Pika to turn static concepts, images, and text prompts into short video clips for social media, ads, and marketing presentations. They are not video producers. They don't have a camera setup, a motion designer on staff, or the budget for a production house for every asset. They have prompts and a process. They're producing things that didn't exist two years ago from a budget that hasn't changed.

Aha

A teammate asked how they managed produce motion content for social and marketing without a video production budget.”

clerkAPP-200
4 comments

The Clerk Authentication Developer

A full-stack developer at a startup who chose Clerk because building authentication from scratch — login, signup, email verification, OAuth, MFA, session management — is 2 months of work that adds zero product differentiation. They integrate Clerk's pre-built components, customize the flows, and manage users through the dashboard. They appreciate that auth "just works" but they've also hit moments where Clerk's opinionated approach conflicts with their product's specific needs. They are a developer who decided that auth is infrastructure, not a feature worth building themselves.

Aha

The developer is building a new SaaS product.”

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.”

togglAPP-107
4 comments

The Toggl Self-Tracker

A freelancer, consultant, or productivity-conscious knowledge worker who tracks time for one of two reasons: they bill by the hour and accuracy is revenue, or they've realized they have no idea where their hours go and they want to find out. Both types start Toggl for practical reasons and discover something unexpected — tracked time is honest in a way that memory and intention are not. They've had the experience of thinking they spent 4 hours on a project and the timer saying 2.2. They've also had the reverse. Both were useful information.

Aha

It happened mid-workflow — they're a UX consultant.”

clerkAPP-012
5 comments

The Clerk Authentication Developer

A full-stack developer or indie hacker building a SaaS product who has decided that authentication is not a competitive advantage and has no interest in building it. They chose Clerk because it ships the full auth experience — sign in, sign up, user profile, MFA, social providers, and organization management — as components they can drop in and style to match their product. They were building on NextJS and Clerk was the obvious answer. It took them four hours to integrate. They've never looked back and have never thought about auth again unless a customer asked for a feature.

Aha

It happened mid-workflow — it's Saturday.”

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.”

calcomAPP-008
6 comments

The Cal.com Developer Scheduler

A developer, indie maker, or privacy-conscious professional who uses Cal.com because they either self-host it or value that they can. They were on Calendly and either hit a pricing ceiling, wanted customization Calendly doesn't allow, or made a deliberate decision about data ownership. Cal.com is open source. They can read the code. They can modify it if they need to. The fact that this is possible — even if they never do it — matters to them in a way that influences their tooling choices.

Aha

It happened mid-workflow — they're building a product that includes embedded scheduling — customers can book time with their su.”

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.”

splineAPP-101
3 comments

The Spline Web 3D Designer

A product designer, visual designer, or creative developer who started using Spline because they wanted 3D on their website or product and Blender was too much. They have a 2D design background — Figma is their native language. Spline felt like Figma with a Z-axis. They've built at least one thing they're proud of: a 3D hero section, an interactive product visualization, a floating element that reacts to cursor position. They use it for client work and personal projects. They consider themselves an early adopter of the idea that 3D should be accessible to product designers, not just motion designers.

Aha

They're redesigning a SaaS product's marketing homepage.”

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.”

gustoAPP-037
6 comments

The Gusto Small Company HR Manager

An HR manager, office manager, or operations lead at a company of 10–75 people for whom payroll and benefits are one of many responsibilities, not the whole job. They run payroll twice a month. They onboard new hires. They manage benefits open enrollment once a year and feel mild panic every time. They chose Gusto because it was less terrifying than what came before it. They trust it, mostly, but payroll is the one area of their job where a mistake has immediate and personal consequences for real people.

Aha

Not a single dramatic moment — more like a Tuesday at 3pm when they realized they hadn't thought about state tax registration requirements that surface after they've already hired in a new state 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.”

obsidianAPP-129
4 comments

The Obsidian Plugin Developer

A developer who uses Obsidian for their own notes and started building plugins to scratch their own itch. They now maintain 1–5 plugins with thousands of downloads and a Discord channel full of feature requests. They know the Obsidian API intimately but wish it was better documented. They build in TypeScript, ship through the community plugin store, and handle support in their spare time. They love the Obsidian community but sometimes feel buried by the expectations that come with a popular free plugin.

Aha

Obsidian ships a new version and the developer's most popular plugin breaks.”

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.”

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.”

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.”

riveAPP-190
4 comments

The Rive Interactive Animation Designer

A motion designer or creative developer who uses Rive to create animations that aren't just decorative — they're interactive. They build loading indicators that respond to progress, toggle switches that morph between states, onboarding illustrations that react to user input, and game-like UI elements. They think in state machines: idle, hover, active, success, error. They chose Rive because After Effects exports video, Lottie exports playback, but Rive exports interactive, state-driven animations that respond to runtime input.

Aha

Not a single dramatic moment — more like a Tuesday at 3pm when they realized they hadn't thought about the state machine editor has a learning curve, especially for designers coming from timeline-based tools in two weeks.”

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