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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ghostAPP-032
4 comments

The Ghost Independent Publisher

An independent journalist, researcher, media entrepreneur, or content organization that chose Ghost because platform ownership matters to them. They're running a publication with a membership model — free and paid tiers, regular editorial content, and a direct relationship with readers they're not willing to cede to Substack's network effects or Beehiiv's operator framing. They are technically capable enough to run Ghost on managed hosting or self-host it. This was a deliberate choice. The people who choose Ghost have thought about the alternatives more carefully than most tool decisions require.

Aha

Not a single dramatic moment — more like a Tuesday at 3pm when they realized they hadn't thought about theme customization that requires Handlebars knowledge most writers don't have in two weeks.”

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.”

1passwordAPP-096
2 comments

The 1Password Security-Conscious Admin

An IT manager, security engineer, or technically-minded operations lead at a company of 20–500 people who adopted 1Password for Teams and now manages credential hygiene across an organization. They have strong feelings about credential sharing via Slack. They have seen what happens when a shared account has no owner and the person who knew the password leaves. They've spent time cleaning up credential sprawl left by a company that grew faster than its security practices. They run 1Password now. It is imperfect but it is dramatically better than what came before.

Aha

Not a single dramatic moment — more like a Tuesday at 3pm when they realized they hadn't thought about vaults that grow without structure until nobody knows what's in them or who owns it in two weeks.”

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.”

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.”

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.”

slackAPP-113
3 comments

The Slack Workspace Architect

An IT admin, department head, or operations lead responsible for how their company uses Slack. They set up the workspace when it was 20 people and now it's 200. They created the channel naming conventions that nobody follows. They are the person people DM when they can't find something, when a channel needs to be archived, or when someone needs to be added to a private channel they shouldn't have access to.

Aha

Not a single dramatic moment — more like a Tuesday at 3pm when they realized they hadn't thought about channel sprawl — 400 channels, half are dead, nobody wants to archive them in two weeks.”

mondayAPP-052
3 comments

The Monday.com Team Lead

A team lead or department head at a company of 50–300 people who uses Monday.com as the primary place their team tracks work. They may not have chosen Monday — it was often adopted company-wide because the CEO liked the demo. They've made it work. Their board is actually used. They've built automations their team quietly depends on. They spend 30–60 minutes a day in Monday and would describe it as "pretty good once you know what you're doing," which is a backhanded compliment they mean sincerely.

Aha

Their team has just absorbed a new function.”

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.”

asanaAPP-005
6 comments

The Asana Agency Project Manager

A project manager at a digital or creative agency juggling 6–12 active client projects at various stages simultaneously. Asana is their external brain — it holds everything they can't hold in their head, which is most of it. They've been through the Asana certification. They've built the templates. They've trained the team. They're still fighting the battle of getting everyone to actually update their tasks.

Aha

Not a single dramatic moment — more like a Tuesday at 3pm when they realized they hadn't thought about team members who don't update their tasks, making the board a fiction in two weeks.”

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.”

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.”

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.”

loomAPP-140
3 comments

The Loom Async Communicator

A product manager, engineering lead, or designer working on a remote or distributed team who realized that most meetings could be a Loom. They record 5–15 looms per week — product updates, code walkthroughs, design feedback, project kickoffs. They've developed a recording style: concise, screen-shared, with their face in the corner. They are an async communication evangelist who believes the 30-minute meeting is a relic of co-located work.

Aha

Not a single dramatic moment — more like a Tuesday at 3pm when they realized they hadn't thought about video organization becomes a mess — finding a specific loom from three months ago requires remembering the exact title in two weeks.”

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.”

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