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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raycastAPP-066
6 comments

The Raycast Power User

A developer, designer, or technical knowledge worker on Mac who replaced Spotlight with Raycast and then spent three weekends making it the center of their computing workflow. They open Raycast more than any other application. They open it for things they didn't know a launcher could do. They've written or installed extensions for their most repetitive tasks. They mention Raycast in the same breath as mechanical keyboards and monitor setups — tools that are invisible when they work and felt intensely when they don't.

Aha

It's 9am.”

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.”

salesforceAPP-072
6 comments

The Reluctant Salesforce User

An enterprise sales rep at a company with 200+ employees who did not choose Salesforce. It was there when they arrived. They've been trained on it twice. They use about 20% of its features and have found workarounds for everything else. They log activity because their manager checks. They update opportunities because forecasting requires it. They do not believe Salesforce makes them better at sales. They believe it makes their manager better at measuring sales.

Aha

The shift was quiet.”

hubspotAPP-039
6 comments

The HubSpot Marketing Manager

A marketing manager at a company with 20–150 employees who is responsible for the entire marketing function — content, email, social, paid, and now increasingly the CRM data that sales keeps asking about. They chose HubSpot or inherited it. They use more of it than anyone else at the company. They still feel like they're not using it right, even after two years.

Aha

It's Monday morning.”

superhumanAPP-163
3 comments

The Superhuman Inbox Zero Executive

A startup CEO, VP, or senior director who receives 150–300 emails per day and treats email like a production system. They chose Superhuman because Gmail was too slow and too noisy. They've memorized the keyboard shortcuts, configured their split inbox, and use the AI triage to surface what matters. They process email like a speed reader processes text — scanning, deciding, acting — in bursts of 15–20 minutes, 3–4 times per day. They are allergic to unread counts and consider inbox zero a professional discipline, not a personality quirk.

Aha

Not a single dramatic moment — more like a Tuesday at 3pm when they realized they hadn't thought about the AI triage sometimes miscategorizes important messages from new contacts in two weeks.”

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