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.

67
rampAPP-148
3 comments

The Ramp Finance Controller

A finance controller, VP of Finance, or head of accounting at a 50–500 person company who chose Ramp because they were tired of chasing receipts, manually categorizing expenses, and closing the books a week after month-end. They manage corporate cards, set spend policies, and review transactions. They appreciate Ramp's automation but know that "automated" still means they're the one who catches the exceptions. They are the financial guardrail of the company.

Aha

It happened mid-workflow — month-end arrives.”

rampAPP-065
5 comments

The Ramp Finance Manager

A finance manager, controller, or CFO at a company of 20–300 people who adopted Ramp to eliminate the expense report process that everyone hated and nobody trusted. They issue cards. They set limits. They receive receipts automatically from employees who forward a text message or take a photo. They close the books faster. They've calculated how many hours per month expense reports used to consume and they don't miss a single one of them. They are the person at the company who is most enthusiastic about Ramp.

Aha

A teammate asked how they managed close the books faster by eliminating the expense report chase.”

amplitudeAPP-002
2 comments

The Amplitude Growth Analyst

A data analyst, growth analyst, or analytics engineer at a Series B–D company who owns Amplitude as the source of truth for product behavior. They are technical enough to write SQL but prefer not to for exploratory analysis. They've mastered the Amplitude chart types. They build dashboards that PMs and executives use but don't fully understand. They're the person in the room who says "let's look at the data" and then actually pulls it up.

Aha

The head of product wants to know which activation milestone most predicts 30-day retention.”

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.”

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.”

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.”

basecampAPP-106
6 comments

The Basecamp Small Agency Owner

A small agency owner, studio founder, or remote team lead with 3–20 people who chose Basecamp because they were tired of configuring project management tools. Basecamp's opinionated structure — message boards, to-dos, schedules, docs, campfire — is not a limitation to them. It's the point. They didn't want to design a system. They wanted to use one. They've been on Basecamp for 2–6 years. They've recommended it to other agency owners who are drowning in Notion setups and Jira configurations. Some of them listened.

Aha

A client project kicks off Monday.”

whimsicalAPP-105
4 comments

The Whimsical Fast Diagrammer

A product manager, designer, or engineer who uses Whimsical for the work that happens before the work — user flows, information architecture diagrams, quick wireframes, system diagrams. They chose Whimsical over Figma for this because Figma requires too much setup for a sketch. They chose it over Miro because they need structure, not freeform. They chose it over Lucidchart because Lucidchart is too heavy for what they're doing. Whimsical is the tool for the thinking phase. It is rarely the final deliverable. It is always the thinking that produces the final deliverable.

Aha

A teammate asked how they managed get a flow or wireframe out of their head and onto a shareable canvas in under 15 minutes.”

whimsicalAPP-177
4 comments

The Whimsical Product Thinker

A product manager, designer, or architect who uses Whimsical when they need to think visually but don't need pixel-perfect precision. They create flowcharts to map user journeys, wireframes to sketch interfaces, and mind maps to explore problem spaces — all in the time it would take to set up an artboard in Figma. They value speed over fidelity. They are the person who brings a Whimsical link to a meeting and says "here's what I'm thinking" before anyone else has a concrete proposal.

Aha

Not a single dramatic moment — more like a Tuesday at 3pm when they realized they hadn't thought about there's a ceiling — when wireframes need more detail, the transition to Figma requires starting over in two weeks.”

roamAPP-195
4 comments

The Roam Research Networked Thinker

A writer, researcher, or knowledge worker who uses Roam Research as an extension of their thinking. They don't organize notes into folders — they write, link, and let the graph reveal connections. They use daily notes as their entry point, double-bracket references to build a web of ideas, and block references to connect thoughts across pages. They've read about Zettelkasten, spaced repetition, and evergreen notes. They've adopted some of these ideas and adapted others. They are building a thinking system, not a filing system.

Aha

Not a single dramatic moment — more like a Tuesday at 3pm when they realized they hadn't thought about performance degrades with large graphs — search and page loads slow down over time in two weeks.”

logseqAPP-176
4 comments

The Logseq Academic Researcher

An academic researcher, PhD student, or independent scholar who uses Logseq as their research knowledge base. They take notes on papers, link concepts across disciplines, and use the graph view to see how ideas connect in ways linear note-taking never revealed. They chose Logseq because it's local-first (their research data stays on their machine), uses an outliner format that matches how they think, and builds a knowledge graph without forcing a predetermined structure. They are building a second brain for their research, and they expect it to outlast their current institution.

Aha

The shift was quiet.”

photoshopAPP-059
4 comments

The Photoshop Production Designer

A graphic designer — in-house or agency — who uses Photoshop as their primary production tool for image work. They've been in Photoshop for 5–15 years and work with the efficiency of someone who knows exactly where everything is and what everything does. They don't explore menus. They use shortcuts. Their workspace is a system they've tuned. Photoshop is slow sometimes and they've learned to work around it the way you work around a colleague's habits — with patience and workarounds they've stopped noticing.

Aha

The shift was quiet.”

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.”

cursorAPP-018
6 comments

The Cursor AI-Native Developer

A software developer with 2–10 years of experience who switched to Cursor after a trial period and didn't go back. They've restructured how they code around the assumption that AI is in the loop. They write less boilerplate. They spend more time reviewing and directing than typing. They're faster on unfamiliar codebases than they've ever been. They're also developing opinions about when AI help hurts — about the kinds of errors that look right until they don't.

Aha

The shift was quiet.”

posthogAPP-134
3 comments

The PostHog Growth Engineer

A growth engineer, product engineer, or technical PM who uses PostHog as their all-in-one growth stack — analytics, feature flags, A/B tests, session replay. They chose PostHog because they didn't want to stitch together Amplitude, LaunchDarkly, and Hotjar. They think in funnels, retention curves, and statistical significance. They are technical enough to self-serve but product-minded enough to care about the "so what" behind the data.

Aha

It happened mid-workflow — the growth engineer is running an A/B test on the onboarding flow.”

beehiivAPP-007
6 comments

The Beehiiv Newsletter Operator

A newsletter founder, media operator, or content entrepreneur who runs a publication with 5,000–100,000 subscribers and treats it as a business with its own P&L, not a side project. They chose Beehiiv because it was built for operators — it has ad network access, referral programs, segmentation, and analytics that treat the newsletter as a product. They think in CAC, LTV, open rate, and click-to-open rate. They have a growth number they're working toward. They may or may not write the newsletter themselves.

Aha

They're in the monthly business review.”

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.”

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.”

midjourneyAPP-049
2 comments

The Midjourney Creative Director

A creative director, art director, or senior designer who adopted Midjourney after realizing it was changing their concept phase. They use it to generate reference material, explore visual directions, and produce images that would previously have required a stock license, a photographer, or a two-week illustration commission. They have strong prompt craft. They know what they're doing. They also know the tool's failure modes and work around them. They do not use it to replace their judgment — they use it to accelerate the point at which judgment can be applied.

Aha

It happened mid-workflow — a campaign needs 12 concept images for a client presentation in two days.”

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.”

squarespaceAPP-077
4 comments

The Squarespace Small Business Owner

A photographer, therapist, consultant, restaurant owner, or small retailer who built their own website on Squarespace because it was the best option they could manage independently. They are not a developer. They do not want to be. They want a website that looks professional, is easy to update, and doesn't require a support ticket to change the menu. They've succeeded at this mostly. There are two things on their site that have been wrong for three months because fixing them would require understanding something they don't want to learn.

Aha

The shift was quiet.”

clayAPP-199
2 comments

The Clay GTM Engineer

A GTM engineer, growth operations lead, or RevOps professional who uses Clay as their data enrichment and workflow engine. They build spreadsheet-like tables that pull from 50+ data providers — enriching companies with technographic data, finding decision-makers' emails, scoring leads based on signals, and triggering personalized outreach. They think in data transformations and API calls. They've replaced hours of manual prospect research with Clay workflows that run in minutes. They are the engineer of the sales pipeline's data layer.

Aha

The shift was quiet.”

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.”

logseqAPP-110
4 comments

The Logseq Local-First Knowledge Builder

A researcher, developer, writer, or privacy-conscious knowledge worker who chose Logseq because their notes are plain `.md` files in a folder they control — not in a proprietary database, not in someone else's cloud. They care about data ownership in a specific way: not paranoia, but principle. They've watched tools sunset, pricing change, and export options degrade. Their Logseq graph syncs to iCloud or a private git repository. It will exist regardless of Logseq's future. They've also genuinely internalized the outliner-first paradigm. They think in bullets that can be linked and referenced anywhere else in the graph.

Aha

They're synthesizing research for a paper.”

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.”

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.”

replitAPP-155
4 comments

The Replit Coding Educator

A coding instructor, bootcamp teacher, or CS professor who uses Replit because it eliminates the "but it works on my machine" problem. Every student gets the same environment, in the browser, with no setup. They can see student code in real time, run it, and give feedback without cloning repos or debugging local environments. They've taught programming long enough to know that environment setup kills motivation faster than any algorithm does. They chose Replit to remove the barrier between "wanting to code" and "coding."

Aha

A teammate asked how they managed eliminate setup and environment issues so students can focus on learning to code, not configuring tools.”

wixAPP-174
4 comments

The Wix Small Business Builder

A small business owner — a personal trainer, a photographer, a bakery, an accountant — who built their website on Wix because they could drag and drop their way to something that looked professional enough. They aren't designers. They aren't developers. They are business owners who need an online presence. They picked a template, moved things around until it looked right, added their text and photos, and hit publish. They update it when they remember to. It's not perfect, but it exists, and it brings in customers.

Aha

A potential client searches "photographer near me" and finds the business owner's Wix site on the second page of Google.”

kajabiAPP-191
4 comments

The Kajabi Course Creator

A consultant, coach, or subject-matter expert who has turned their expertise into an online course business on Kajabi. They teach everything from business strategy to photography to fitness. They chose Kajabi because they didn't want to connect Teachable + ConvertKit + Stripe + WordPress + Zapier just to sell a course. They build landing pages, host video lessons, manage email sequences, process payments, and track student progress — all in one platform. They are a teacher who became a business owner, and the business runs on Kajabi.

Aha

A teammate asked how they managed create and deliver online courses with video, text, quizzes, and downloadable resources.”

airtableAPP-001
4 comments

The Airtable Ops Manager

An operations manager, program manager, or department lead at a 20–200 person company who discovered that spreadsheets couldn't hold what they needed to track anymore. They built something in Airtable that their team actually uses. They are not a developer, but they've learned to think like one — tables, relations, fields. They are simultaneously proud of what they've built and anxious about what happens when it breaks.

Aha

A teammate asked how they managed maintain operational data that's accurate enough to make real decisions from.”

contentfulAPP-015
3 comments

The Contentful Content Manager

A content manager, digital editor, or marketing manager at a company with a developer-built Contentful implementation. They publish product pages, blog posts, campaign content, and documentation through Contentful's web interface. They did not design the content model — a developer did. They live inside that model every day and have a detailed understanding of which fields do what and which ones are a mystery. They are not a developer but they've learned to think in content types.

Aha

A teammate asked how they managed publish and update content quickly without waiting on a developer for every change.”

figjamAPP-027
5 comments

The FigJam Product Team Facilitator

A product manager, design lead, or team facilitator at a product company who uses FigJam for team whiteboarding because their team already lives in Figma. They chose FigJam over Miro because the context switch is lower — design references, wireframes, and working files can be linked or embedded directly from Figma. They run planning sessions, retrospectives, decision workshops, and design crits on FigJam. Their team knows how to use it. This matters more than they expected it to.

Aha

The shift was quiet.”

intercomAPP-040
4 comments

The Intercom Customer Success Manager

A customer success manager or support lead at a B2B SaaS company who uses Intercom as their primary customer communication layer. They handle inbound support conversations, run proactive outreach campaigns to at-risk accounts, and manage the onboarding message sequences that new users see. They know which customers are about to churn before anyone else does because they read the conversation history. They are the person who knows more about the product's real failure points than anyone in engineering.

Aha

The shift was quiet.”

todoistAPP-084
6 comments

The Todoist GTD Practitioner

A knowledge worker — often a project manager, consultant, writer, or developer — who has read productivity books and tried multiple task managers before settling on Todoist. They've built a system. It works when they use it. The failure mode is not the tool — it's consistency. They believe in GTD or a GTD-adjacent framework. They have projects, labels, and filters set up in a way that feels logical to them and would confuse anyone else. They've rebuilt the system twice.

Aha

It's Sunday evening.”

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.”

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.”

craftAPP-185
4 comments

The Craft Personal Document Creator

A professional in the Apple ecosystem — Mac, iPad, iPhone — who uses Craft for everything from meeting notes to project proposals to personal journals. They chose Craft because it feels native to macOS and iOS in a way that Notion and Google Docs don't. They value beautiful typography, smooth block-based editing, and the ability to work offline on an airplane and sync when they land. They are a writer who cares about the writing environment, not just the output.

Aha

The shift was quiet.”

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.”

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.”

dropboxAPP-162
2 comments

The Dropbox Creative Team Manager

A creative director, design lead, or production manager who manages files for a creative team — designers, photographers, video editors, copywriters. They chose Dropbox because it handles large files (PSD, AI, video) better than Google Drive and because the desktop sync means creatives can work in their native apps without learning a new tool. They are the person who designs the folder structure, enforces naming conventions, and answers the question "where is the latest version of the logo?" at least three times a week.

Aha

The shift was quiet.”

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.”

squarespaceAPP-156
4 comments

The Squarespace Small Business Owner

A small business owner — a bakery, a yoga studio, a photography business, a consulting firm — who built their website on Squarespace because they needed something that looked professional without hiring a designer or developer. They chose a template, swapped in their photos, wrote their copy, and launched. They're not technical, but they figured out the editor. They update the site monthly — new photos, seasonal hours, blog posts when they have time. The website is their digital storefront, and they treat it with the same pride they treat their physical one.

Aha

A potential customer finds the small business owner's Squarespace site through Google.”

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.”

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.”

webflowAPP-089
3 comments

The Webflow No-Code Designer

A designer — visual, brand, or marketing — who uses Webflow to design and build production websites without relying on a developer. They came from Figma or Sketch and discovered that the gap between design and the live site was where everything good went to die. Webflow closed that gap. They have strong opinions about how websites should look and work, and Webflow lets them act on those opinions directly. They are faster in Webflow than any developer who doesn't know the design would be.

Aha

It's launch week for a new product campaign.”

canvaAPP-010
6 comments

The Canva Non-Designer

A marketing coordinator, social media manager, small business owner, or teacher who is responsible for creating visual content and has no design training. They discovered Canva and it changed what was possible for them. They can now make things that look professional without calling a designer or spending three hours in PowerPoint. They are faster than they were. They are not as good as an actual designer. They know this and they've made peace with it.

Aha

A teammate asked how they managed create content that looks polished enough to publish without a professional review.”

miroAPP-050
6 comments

The Miro Remote Facilitator

A UX designer, product strategist, design researcher, or Agile coach who uses Miro as their workshop room. They've run retrospectives, journey mapping sessions, design sprints, and ideation workshops — all on Miro, all remote. They are good at facilitation. They have strong opinions about how a Miro board should be structured. They've also learned that a beautifully structured board means nothing if participants don't know how to use sticky notes.

Aha

Not a single dramatic moment — more like a Tuesday at 3pm when they realized they hadn't thought about new participants who spend the first 10 minutes learning Miro instead of the topic in two weeks.”

attioAPP-006
3 comments

The Attio Revenue Operator

A revenue ops manager, head of sales, or technical founder at a startup of 10–100 people who evaluated the legacy CRMs and decided not to inherit their constraints. They chose Attio because it's data-model-first — they can define what a record means in their business rather than forcing their process into Salesforce's assumptions. They are building their CRM from scratch. This is a significant investment. They are aware of that and have decided it's worth it.

Aha

A teammate asked how they managed build a CRM that reflects their actual sales process rather than a generic framework.”

flyioAPP-030
4 comments

The Fly.io Container Developer

A backend or full-stack developer who needs to run server-side applications — not just static sites and serverless functions — and wants them deployed globally without managing Kubernetes or paying for managed Kubernetes overhead. They found Fly.io and found a platform that takes a Dockerfile and runs it near users. They `fly deploy`. It works. They have opinions about Fly.io that include real affection and specific frustrations, which is the relationship one has with a platform they actually depend on.

Aha

It happened mid-workflow — they're deploying a Phoenix application — Elixir, with WebSockets and a persistent database connecti.”

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.”

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.”

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.”

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.”

mintlifyAPP-183
4 comments

The Mintlify Developer Relations Lead

A developer relations lead, technical writer, or engineering manager responsible for their API's documentation. They chose Mintlify because the docs should look as good as the product. They write guides, maintain API references, and obsess over the developer experience from first visit to first API call. They measure success not by page views but by time-to-first-successful-API-call. They've learned that bad documentation is the most expensive support channel a company has.

Aha

The company ships a new API endpoint.”

canvaAPP-122
4 comments

The Canva Marketing Manager

A marketing manager or content lead at a 10–100 person company who produces 20–50 pieces of visual content per week. They're not a designer and they know it — but Canva makes them good enough. They've built a template library that keeps everything on-brand, and they resize for every platform in one click. They're proud of the speed but occasionally embarrassed when a real designer sees their work. They are the reason the brand looks consistent, even if the brand guidelines live in a Google Doc nobody reads.

Aha

Not a single dramatic moment — more like a Tuesday at 3pm when they realized they hadn't thought about brand Kit limitations — fonts upload fine but brand colors sometimes don't apply consistently in two weeks.”

gitbookAPP-104
6 comments

The GitBook Developer Documentation Lead

A developer advocate, technical writer, or senior engineer at a developer-facing company who owns the documentation. They chose or inherited GitBook because it lowers the friction for engineers to contribute alongside the technical writers. They care about documentation quality in a way most of their colleagues don't — because they're the one who gets the support tickets when the docs are wrong. They know the gap between documentation that exists and documentation that works. They're trying to close it.

Aha

Not a single dramatic moment — more like a Tuesday at 3pm when they realized they hadn't thought about documentation that drifts from reality because nobody owns the update process in two weeks.”

mintlifyAPP-112
4 comments

The Mintlify Developer Advocate

A developer advocate, DX engineer, or technical founder at a developer-facing company who chose Mintlify because they believed documentation was a product, not a document. They write docs in MDX. Their docs live in a git repository alongside their code. They ship documentation the same way they ship features: PR, review, merge, deploy. They care about the visual quality of their docs because they know developers judge a product by how it feels to learn it — and bad docs signal a bad API. They've recommended Mintlify to three other devrel teams. All three use it now.

Aha

The shift was quiet.”

segmentAPP-153
3 comments

The Segment Data Architect

A data engineer or analytics engineer who manages Segment as the central event routing layer. Every product event — page views, clicks, purchases, signups — flows through their Segment workspace before reaching the data warehouse, analytics tools, and marketing platforms. They are the plumber of the data stack. Nobody thanks them when data flows correctly, but everyone notices when it doesn't. They think in events, properties, and destinations. They've learned that the hardest part of data infrastructure isn't moving data — it's keeping it clean.

Aha

The shift was quiet.”

descriptAPP-150
3 comments

The Descript Content Creator

A content creator, podcaster, or YouTuber who discovered that editing video by editing text is the workflow they always wanted. They are not a professional video editor — they are a creator who needs to edit video. They record long-form content and use Descript to clean it up: remove filler words, cut dead air, generate highlights, and export polished clips. They've tried Premiere and DaVinci Resolve but found the timeline-based editing paradigm unnecessary for talking-head and interview content.

Aha

A teammate asked how they managed edit video and audio by editing the transcript — cut a sentence, cut the video.”

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.”

sanityAPP-186
4 comments

The Sanity Content Architect

A developer or content architect who uses Sanity because they think about content as structured data, not pages. They design content models that serve web, mobile, email, and API consumers from a single source. They've built custom studios, created real-time collaborative editing environments, and used GROQ to query content in ways traditional CMS query languages can't express. They are the architect of the content layer, and they treat content modeling with the same rigor as database schema design.

Aha

Not a single dramatic moment — more like a Tuesday at 3pm when they realized they hadn't thought about customizing the Studio deeply requires significant React knowledge, raising the bar for non-senior developers 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.”

hexAPP-188
4 comments

The Hex Collaborative Data Analyst

A data analyst or analytics engineer who uses Hex because it combines everything they used to do across 3–4 separate tools into one collaborative environment. They write SQL to pull data, Python to transform it, and build visualizations and dashboards — all in the same notebook. They share their work as interactive apps that stakeholders can explore without learning SQL. They've replaced Jupyter notebooks, Mode, and Google Sheets with Hex. They are the data person who makes data accessible to people who aren't data people.

Aha

The marketing team asks: "Which campaigns drove the most pipeline last quarter?" The data analyst opens Hex, writes a SQL query to pull campaign data, joins it with pipeline data, and adds a Python cell to calculate attribution.”

raycastAPP-157
3 comments

The Raycast Workflow Automator

A developer or technical power user on macOS who has made Raycast the nerve center of their computing workflow. They don't just launch apps — they manage clipboard history, control Spotify, search GitHub issues, translate text, convert currencies, and run custom scripts — all from a single keyboard shortcut. They've installed 15–30 extensions and written a few of their own. They are the person whose colleagues watch them work and ask "what is that tool and how do I get it." They measure productivity in keystrokes saved.

Aha

It happened mid-workflow — the developer starts their day.”

miroAPP-142
4 comments

The Miro Workshop Facilitator

A product designer, agile coach, or team lead who facilitates remote workshops in Miro. They don't just draw on a whiteboard — they design participatory experiences: timed exercises, voting rounds, structured templates, and breakout activities. They've learned that the tool is 30% of a good workshop; the other 70% is facilitation design. They are the person who spends 2 hours preparing a Miro board so that a 1-hour workshop runs smoothly for 20 people.

Aha

The facilitator is running a design sprint kickoff with 15 people.”

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