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.

77
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.”

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.”

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.”

heightAPP-187
2 comments

The Height Autonomous Project Tracker

A product team lead or engineering manager at a startup who chose Height because it promised what every PM secretly wants: a project tracker that maintains itself. They use Height's AI features to auto-triage bug reports, suggest task labels, and identify duplicate issues. They still do the strategic work — prioritization, sprint planning, roadmap decisions — but the administrative overhead of keeping the tracker clean is lower than with Jira or Linear. They are cautiously optimistic about AI in project management — it works 75% of the time, and the 25% it doesn't requires less effort to fix than doing it all manually.

Aha

A teammate asked how they managed reduce the time spent on task triage, labeling, and organization by 50% with AI assistance.”

heightAPP-111
4 comments

The Height Engineering Team Lead

An engineering team lead or technical PM at a company of 20–150 people who evaluated Linear and wanted more — more project hierarchy, more cross-functional visibility, more flexibility for non-engineering teams to work alongside engineering in the same tool. They chose Height. They're building their system in it. They like that it feels like a tool built by people who understand engineering workflows, not a project management tool that engineering is expected to tolerate. They're still learning the edges of it.

Aha

It happened mid-workflow — sprint planning is Monday.”

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.”

mondayAPP-139
4 comments

The Monday.com Team Lead

A team lead or department manager at a 30–200 person company who chose Monday.com because it looked simple enough that their team would actually use it. They set up the boards, configured the automations, and built the views. Now they spend 20 minutes every morning making sure the board reflects reality. They are the bridge between the team's actual work and the executive's need for status updates. They don't love project management tools, but they love knowing where things stand.

Aha

It happened mid-workflow — the team lead sets up a sprint board with automations: when a task moves to "In Review," it notifies the reviewer and updates the deadline.”

notion-aiAPP-053
6 comments

The Notion AI Knowledge Worker

A product manager, writer, or operations lead who already uses Notion as their primary workspace and added Notion AI to make their existing workflows faster. They were already in Notion 4–6 hours a day. Notion AI is not a new tool to them — it's a capability inside the tool they already trust. They use it to summarize meeting notes, draft first versions of documents, and ask questions of their existing workspace. The context is already there. The AI can work with it. This is the part that makes Notion AI different from a separate AI tool to them.

Aha

It happened mid-workflow — they've just finished a 90-minute discovery call.”

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.”

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.”

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.”

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.”

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.”

jiraAPP-041
3 comments

The Jira-Burdened PM

A product manager or engineering team lead at a software company who runs sprints in Jira. They did not set up the Jira instance they work in — it was configured by someone who left 18 months ago, and the workflow has accumulated technical debt as surely as the codebase has. They know what they need Jira to do. Getting it to do that is a separate problem.

Aha

Not a single dramatic moment — more like a Tuesday at 3pm when they realized they hadn't thought about ticket statuses that don't map to how engineering actually works in two weeks.”

linearAPP-125
4 comments

The Linear Product Manager

A product manager at a 20–200 person startup who moved to Linear because Jira was too heavy and Notion boards weren't structured enough. They work at the initiative and project level while their engineers work at the issue level. They need to see the forest while the team sees the trees. They love Linear's speed and keyboard shortcuts but struggle to get the strategic views they need without building custom views for every stakeholder meeting.

Aha

It happened mid-workflow — the CEO asks "are we on track for the Q2 launch?" The PM opens Linear, checks 4 projects across 2 teams, counts completed vs.”

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.”

notion-aiAPP-167
3 comments

The Notion AI Content Strategist

A content strategist, knowledge manager, or team lead who uses Notion AI as part of their daily workflow inside Notion. They don't use it to write blog posts from scratch — they use it to summarize 45-minute meeting transcripts into action items, turn rough notes into structured documents, answer questions about information buried in the team's wiki, and draft from templates. They've found the sweet spot: AI handles the structure, they handle the thinking.

Aha

The shift was quiet.”

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.”

notionAPP-055
6 comments

The Notion Second-Brain Builder

A solo founder, PM, or highly organized individual contributor who has made Notion the center of their work life. They have a workspace that would take three hours to explain to someone new. They've built custom dashboards, linked databases, and templates they're genuinely proud of. They've also started from scratch twice after a system got too complex to maintain. They believe the perfect Notion setup is always two weekends away.

Aha

Not a single dramatic moment — more like a Tuesday at 3pm when they realized they hadn't thought about performance on large databases — the lag is a betrayal in two weeks.”

notionAPP-115
3 comments

The Notion Workspace Admin

A team lead, chief of staff, or ops person who became the unofficial Notion admin because they were the first person to organize anything in the workspace. They've built the team wiki, the project tracker template, and the onboarding guide. They spend more time maintaining the structure of Notion than using it for their actual job. They live in fear of someone moving a page to the wrong section and breaking every linked database.

Aha

A new team member joins and asks where to find the product roadmap.”

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.”

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.”

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.”

readwiseAPP-170
4 comments

The Readwise Knowledge Synthesizer

A voracious reader — books, articles, newsletters, podcasts, Twitter threads — who realized that reading without capturing is forgetting. They use Readwise to collect highlights from Kindle, Instapaper, podcasts, and the web, then Readwise Reader for their daily reading queue. They've built a workflow where everything they consume flows through one system, highlights are tagged and resurfaced, and insights compound over time. They are the person who can always find "that article I read about X" because they highlighted the key passage six months ago.

Aha

It happened mid-workflow — the knowledge worker is writing a strategy memo about pricing models.”

ripplingAPP-166
4 comments

The Rippling HR Administrator

An HR administrator, people ops manager, or office manager at a 50–500 person company who manages Rippling as their all-in-one HR platform. They handle onboarding (IT provisioning, payroll setup, benefits enrollment), offboarding (access revocation, final paycheck, COBRA), and everything in between. They chose Rippling because the alternative was stitching together 5 separate tools. They appreciate the unified system but have learned that "all-in-one" means "all the complexity in one place." They are the person who makes sure new hires have a laptop, a paycheck, and health insurance on day one.

Aha

It happened mid-workflow — a new engineer starts Monday.”

ripplingAPP-070
4 comments

The Rippling HR/IT Admin

An HR manager or IT admin — sometimes the same person — at a company large enough that onboarding a new employee involves both an HR workflow and an IT workflow, and small enough that the same person owns both. They chose Rippling because it promised to unify those two workflows into one. When it works — when a new hire's laptop ships, their apps provision, and their payroll is set up in a single flow — it delivers on that promise in a way nothing else does. When it doesn't work, it's complicated in proportion to how much it was supposed to simplify.

Aha

An employee is leaving in two weeks.”

todoistAPP-143
4 comments

The Todoist Productivity System Builder

A knowledge worker — often a freelancer, consultant, or senior IC — who has turned Todoist into a personal operating system. They don't just track tasks; they've built a system. GTD-inspired projects, context-based labels, custom filters for different energy levels and time blocks. They have recurring tasks for weekly reviews, monthly planning, and annual goal-setting. They've tried every productivity app and keep coming back to Todoist because it's fast, reliable, and doesn't try to be more than a task manager.

Aha

It happened mid-workflow — it's Sunday evening.”

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.”

descriptAPP-021
4 comments

The Descript Podcast Producer

A podcast producer, video content creator, or marketing team member who discovered Descript and now finds traditional timeline editing alienating. They edit by editing the transcript. They remove filler words in bulk. They record pickups without re-recording the whole segment. They've explained Descript to other editors and watched the same expression — skepticism that becomes revelation — every time. They are not a professional audio engineer. They produce content that sounds professional. That gap is Descript.

Aha

It happened mid-workflow — a 52-minute interview recording has just finished uploading.”

convertkitAPP-016
5 comments

The ConvertKit Creator Monetizer

An online creator — YouTuber, course seller, coach, author, or educator — who has built an email list and uses ConvertKit to turn that audience into revenue. They chose ConvertKit because it was built for creators: the tagging system makes sense for how creators think about audience segments, the Creator Pro features align with their actual business model, and the community of ConvertKit users is full of people doing exactly what they're doing. They are building a creator business, not just an email list. They see their subscribers as an audience, not a database.

Aha

They've just launched a new course.”

fullstoryAPP-108
6 comments

The FullStory Behavioral Analytics PM

A senior product manager, digital experience lead, or data-savvy UX researcher at a company of 200–5,000 people where FullStory was purchased as a platform — not a point tool. They use it to answer questions that neither analytics dashboards nor individual session recordings can answer alone: what does the full behavioral pattern look like for users who churn? Where in the enterprise checkout flow do users consistently struggle? Which UI elements are generating frustration signals at scale? They work with data. They also watch sessions. Both inform the decision.

Aha

The shift was quiet.”

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.”

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.”

fullstoryAPP-197
3 comments

The FullStory Digital Experience Analyst

A product analyst or UX researcher at a digital product company who uses FullStory as their lens into the user experience. They don't just look at funnels and conversion rates — they watch sessions, identify frustration signals (rage clicks, dead clicks, error clicks), and correlate behavioral patterns with business outcomes. They've learned to find the story in the data: why conversions dropped, where users get confused, what makes the checkout feel broken. They are the translator between raw user behavior and product decisions.

Aha

The product team sees a 15% drop in checkout completion after a recent redesign.”

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.”

figma-dev-modeAPP-028
4 comments

The Figma Dev Mode Engineer

A frontend engineer at a product company who implements UI from Figma designs. Dev Mode is their interface to the design file — the layer of Figma that was built for them rather than around them. They use it to extract measurements, inspect component properties, copy CSS values, and verify that what they've built matches what was designed. They have strong feelings about when Dev Mode helps and when it's still faster to ask the designer. Those feelings are specific.

Aha

Not a single dramatic moment — more like a Tuesday at 3pm when they realized they hadn't thought about cSS output that assumes a different architecture than the codebase they're working in in two weeks.”

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.”

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.”

sanityAPP-073
4 comments

The Sanity Developer-Content Team

A developer who chose Sanity for a project that needed a content infrastructure serious enough to model complex relationships and flexible enough to be customized for a non-developer content team. They built the schema. They configured the Studio. They wrote the GROQ queries. The content team uses what they built every day. The developer's relationship with Sanity is: maintenance, evolution, and occasional deep satisfaction when the content model they designed months ago handles a new requirement gracefully.

Aha

Not a single dramatic moment — more like a Tuesday at 3pm when they realized they hadn't thought about schema changes that require migration scripts for existing content — the cost in two weeks.”

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.”

excelAPP-026
5 comments

The Excel Financial Analyst

A financial analyst at a corporation, investment firm, or consultancy for whom Excel is not software — it is the medium of thought. They spend 5–7 hours a day inside spreadsheets. They build models that other people are afraid to open. They have keyboard shortcuts memorized that the rest of the company doesn't know exist. They've rescued a broken model the night before a board presentation. They have opinions about Excel that they share without being asked.

Aha

It happened mid-workflow — they're building a 3-year P&L model for a new product line.”

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.”

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.”

slackAPP-076
7 comments

The Slack-Drowning Knowledge Worker

A full-time knowledge worker — marketer, PM, ops, customer success — at a company large enough that Slack has become the ambient noise of their workday. They didn't design the channel structure they live in. They inherited it. They have 12 unread DMs, are mentioned in 3 channels they rarely check, and have muted so many channels that important things occasionally slip through the cracks. They're not bad at their job. They're bad at Slack because Slack has become its own job.

Aha

It happened mid-workflow — it's 10am.”

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.”

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.”

mailchimpAPP-047
5 comments

The Mailchimp Small Business Owner

A small business owner, solopreneur, or creator who sends a regular email to their list — weekly newsletter, promotional email, customer announcement. They are not a marketer by training. They set up Mailchimp because it was recommended and free. They've been using it for 1–4 years. They care about their list and think of it as their most direct connection to their customers. They are not fully sure what open rates mean in a post-Apple-MPP world but they still check them because it's the only signal they have.

Aha

A teammate asked how they managed send emails their list looks forward to, not emails that get unsubscribed from.”

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.”

excelAPP-160
4 comments

The Excel Financial Modeler

A financial analyst, FP&A professional, or investment banker who builds financial models in Excel the way architects build buildings — with structure, precision, and the knowledge that if one formula is wrong, everything above it falls. They've been using Excel for 5–15 years. They think in cell references, not coordinates. They know keyboard shortcuts that most people don't know exist. They've built models that a CEO used to make a $50M decision, and they've spent weekends debugging a circular reference that shouldn't have been circular.

Aha

The CFO asks for a scenario analysis by tomorrow morning: what happens to cash flow if revenue grows 10% slower than projected and two enterprise deals slip to next quarter.”

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.”

vercelAPP-124
3 comments

The Vercel Agency Deployer

A developer at a web agency or a freelancer who deploys and manages 20–100 client projects on Vercel. They chose Vercel because the developer experience is excellent and Next.js deploys are zero-config. But managing 50 projects across 15 clients has turned deployment into project management. They spend as much time in the Vercel dashboard organizing teams and domains as they do writing code. They know every deployment preview URL is a demo link, and they've sent the wrong preview to the wrong client exactly once.

Aha

A client emails asking why their site is showing an old version.”

drataAPP-173
4 comments

The Drata Compliance Automation Lead

A security engineer, compliance lead, or CTO at a startup who needs SOC 2, ISO 27001, or HIPAA compliance to close enterprise deals. They chose Drata because the alternative was spreadsheets, manual evidence collection, and $50K in consultant fees. They've connected their cloud infrastructure, HR tools, and code repositories to Drata for automated evidence collection. They understand that compliance is a business requirement, not a security one — the real security work is separate. They are simultaneously grateful for automation and frustrated by how much manual work remains.

Aha

A teammate asked how they managed automate evidence collection across cloud infrastructure, identity providers, and HR systems.”

docusignAPP-159
3 comments

The DocuSign Legal Operations Manager

A legal operations manager, contracts administrator, or legal team member responsible for the organization's DocuSign implementation. They manage templates, set up signing workflows, and make sure contracts go through the right approval chains. They're the person who built the NDA template, the SOW template, and the vendor agreement template. They field requests like "I need this signed by Friday" and translate them into proper DocuSign envelopes with the right fields, routing, and compliance settings. They are the API between the legal team and everyone else who needs something signed.

Aha

Not a single dramatic moment — more like a Tuesday at 3pm when they realized they hadn't thought about template management becomes unwieldy as the library grows — versioning and deprecation are manual processes 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.”

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.”

sentryAPP-136
4 comments

The Sentry Error Wrangler

A developer — usually mid-level to senior — who has become the de facto owner of error tracking on their team. They set up Sentry, configured the alerts, and now they're the person who triages the error feed every morning. They know the difference between a real bug and a noisy exception. They've learned to read stack traces the way a doctor reads X-rays — quickly, looking for the thing that's actually wrong. They carry the mental burden of knowing exactly how many errors are happening in production at any given moment.

Aha

Not a single dramatic moment — more like a Tuesday at 3pm when they realized they hadn't thought about grouping algorithms that split one bug into multiple issues or merge different bugs into one in two weeks.”

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.”

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.”

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.”

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.”

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.”

liveblocksAPP-045
4 comments

The Liveblocks Collaboration Developer

A frontend or full-stack developer at a SaaS company whose product needs real-time collaboration — multiple users working in the same document, canvas, or interface simultaneously. They've looked at building it themselves. The WebSocket infrastructure, the conflict resolution, the presence system, the storage — it's 3–6 months of work that isn't their product. They chose Liveblocks to compress that into a week. They are now the person at their company who knows how Liveblocks works. This is a niche form of expertise they didn't expect to develop.

Aha

The shift was quiet.”

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.”

perplexityAPP-058
4 comments

The Perplexity AI-Native Searcher

A researcher, analyst, consultant, or curious professional who started using Perplexity for quick lookups and gradually shifted most of their search behavior to it. They value citations. They appreciate the synthesized answer more than a list of links they have to open and read. They trust it for most things. They verify independently for decisions where being wrong has consequences. They've tried to explain why they prefer it to people who use Google and have not fully succeeded because the difference is in the feel of the first answer, which doesn't translate to a verbal description.

Aha

It happened mid-workflow — they're researching a niche regulatory question for a client: the current status of SEC rules around.”

attioAPP-193
4 comments

The Attio Revenue Operations Lead

A revenue operations lead or head of sales operations at a Series A–C startup who chose Attio because legacy CRMs either cost too much (Salesforce) or think too rigidly (HubSpot). They build custom objects, design pipeline views, and create automations that match how their team actually sells — not how a CRM template assumes they sell. They think in data models, not contact records. They've realized that a CRM is only as good as the data in it, and their primary job is making sure the data stays clean and the team actually uses the tool.

Aha

It happened mid-workflow — the company is expanding from SMB to mid-market sales.”

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.”

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.”

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.”

flyioAPP-154
4 comments

The Fly.io Edge Deployer

A backend developer or DevOps engineer who deploys applications on Fly.io because they need their app running close to users globally — not just served from a CDN, but actually computing at the edge. They've outgrown Heroku's simplicity, don't want AWS's complexity, and find Vercel too opinionated for non-Next.js workloads. Fly.io hits the sweet spot: Docker containers deployed globally with a CLI that feels developer-first. They're comfortable with infrastructure but don't want it to be their full-time job.

Aha

Not a single dramatic moment — more like a Tuesday at 3pm when they realized they hadn't thought about stateful workloads at the edge (databases, volumes) have limitations that aren't always clear until production in two weeks.”

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.”

storybookAPP-171
4 comments

The Storybook Design System Maintainer

A frontend developer or design technologist who maintains the company's Storybook instance. They write stories for every component, document props with controls, set up visual regression testing, and serve as the bridge between designers and developers. They are the keeper of the design system's technical truth. When a designer asks "does this component exist?" the answer lives in their Storybook. When a developer asks "how do I use this prop?" the answer lives in their Storybook. They are the librarian of the component library.

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.”

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.”

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.”

splineAPP-179
4 comments

The Spline 3D Web Designer

A web designer or creative developer who uses Spline to add 3D to their web projects without the learning curve of Blender or Cinema 4D. They create 3D hero sections, interactive product visualizations, animated icons, and immersive landing pages. They are a designer who crossed into the third dimension. They appreciate that Spline runs in the browser, exports to the web natively, and feels like a design tool rather than a 3D modeling application. They are the person making websites feel like they have depth.

Aha

A SaaS company wants a landing page that stands out.”

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.”

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