Senior Product Designer
Who you are
- You’re deeply customer-empathetic: You want to understand real pain points and messy, complex workflows, and you’re energized by making them feel simple.
- You’re pragmatic and fast: You can pivot, trade off, and keep momentum without lowering the bar. You ship, learn, and refine.
- You have strong product taste: You bring opinions, propose solutions, and aren’t afraid to lead with intuition backed by experience and customer context.
- You collaborate exceptionally well: You work smoothly with engineering, product, and customer success to align quickly and execute well.
- You’re technical enough to move fast with engineers: You understand constraints and edge cases (states, responsiveness, accessibility) and design with implementation in mind.
- You use AI as leverage: You use AI tools to speed up research synthesis, copy/UX writing, exploration, prototyping, and iteration—while keeping judgment and quality in the loop.
- You thrive in early-stage: You’ve taken products from 0→1 (or close), and you’re comfortable with ambiguity and evolving priorities.
- You can bridge B2C craft to B2B: You either have B2C experience or you’re excited to bring that level of usability and polish into a B2B product.
What the job involves
- Own design end-to-end (the fun kind): From “wait, what problem are we solving?” → messy sketches → crisp flows → pixels → handoff → QA → iteration. If a button looks sad in production, you’ll notice and fix it.
- Stay close to customers: Talk to users, observe workflows, learn where they struggle, and translate that into clear, shippable design.
- Build and evolve foundations: Shape the look, feel, and interaction patterns of the product (and how it shows up as a brand).
- Iterate relentlessly: Refine designs based on feedback, usage, and what’s actually working in production.
- Partner tightly with product + engineering: Co-define solutions, keep scope realistic, and improve the design → build → ship loop.
- Make the team faster: Improve the design system, workflows, and handoff so shipping gets easier over time.
- Be pragmatic about tradeoffs: We’re early-stage. Sometimes the goal is “useful and shipped,” then we tighten once it’s proven.