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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pikaAPP-198
4 comments

The Pika Video Creator

A social media manager, content creator, or marketer who uses Pika to generate short video clips for social media, ads, and content marketing. They're not a video editor — they're a marketer who needs video content faster than traditional production allows. They type descriptions and get video clips. They use image-to-video for product animations. They create motion graphics from static designs. They've learned that "good enough for social" is a valid quality bar, and Pika hits it in minutes instead of hours.

Aha

It happened mid-workflow — the social media manager needs 5 short clips for the week's content calendar.”

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.”

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.”

superhumanAPP-082
4 comments

The Superhuman Executive

A founder, executive, investor, or senior individual contributor for whom email is a primary work surface and inbox zero is not aspirational — it is the operating condition required to function. They use Superhuman because they did the math: the time saved per email multiplied by 200 emails per day is real money. They have strong keyboard habits. They were already fast at email. Superhuman made them faster. They will tell you about it if you ask, and sometimes if you don't.

Aha

Not a single dramatic moment — more like a Tuesday at 3pm when they realized they hadn't thought about mobile experience that can't fully replicate the keyboard-driven speed of desktop in two weeks.”

readwiseAPP-099
5 comments

The Readwise Highlight Librarian

A voracious reader — typically a knowledge worker, researcher, writer, or lifelong learner — who realized that reading without retention is expensive entertainment. They started using Readwise because they kept forgetting what they'd read. They now have 8,000–30,000 highlights across Kindle books, web articles, PDFs, and podcasts. They do the daily review. Not every day — most days. The review takes 5 minutes and resurfaces things they've completely forgotten. Occasionally a highlight resurfaces at exactly the right moment for what they're working on. This is not magic. This is why they pay for Readwise.

Aha

It happened mid-workflow — tuesday morning.”

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.”

pagerdutyAPP-103
3 comments

The PagerDuty On-Call Engineer

A software engineer or site reliability engineer who is on a rotating on-call schedule and whose relationship with PagerDuty is defined by the moments it wakes them up. They've been paged at 3am. They've resolved incidents from their phone in bed. They've also been paged for something that wasn't an incident — a flaky alert, a threshold set too low, a monitoring rule that was never updated after the system changed. Every false positive erodes their trust in the alert and their willingness to respond with full urgency next time. They manage this tension carefully.

Aha

The shift was quiet.”

supabaseAPP-130
4 comments

The Supabase Indie Hacker

A solo developer or indie hacker building a SaaS product where Supabase is the entire backend. They chose Supabase because it gives them Postgres, auth, storage, and real-time out of the box — and they can ship their MVP in a weekend instead of a month. They write SQL directly, use Row Level Security because they have to, and treat the Supabase dashboard as their admin panel. They are building a business alone and Supabase is the co-founder that handles the backend.

Aha

The shift was quiet.”

datadogAPP-126
3 comments

The Datadog SRE

A site reliability engineer or DevOps engineer responsible for the uptime and performance of production systems. They chose Datadog because it combines metrics, traces, logs, and alerts in one place — but now they're paying for all of it and the bill is terrifying. They've built dashboards that are beautiful, alerts that are precise, and runbooks that nobody reads. They are the person who gets paged at 3 AM and needs to determine in 90 seconds whether this is a real incident or a flapping alert.

Aha

The shift was quiet.”

substackAPP-149
4 comments

The Substack Independent Publisher

A writer, journalist, or subject-matter expert who has turned their expertise into a Substack newsletter with paying subscribers. They are not a blogger — they are running a media business. They write 2–4 times per week, manage a growing list of free and paid subscribers, and check their subscriber metrics more often than they'd admit. They chose Substack because it was the simplest path from "I should write" to "people are paying me to write." They appreciate the simplicity but worry about what happens if the platform changes its terms.

Aha

The shift was quiet.”

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