Substack

Product Designer

Substack$150K — $215K *
US-AnywhereRemote in United States
Consumer Technology
Less than 5 years of experience
Job Overview by Ladders

Qualifications

  • 3+ years of product design experience, particularly in software interfaces
  • Strong portfolio showcasing relevant design solutions
  • High proficiency in Figma and experience with social networks or content systems
  • Comfortable with uncertainty and ambiguity in a startup environment
  • Balanced interest in independence and collaboration

Responsibilities

  • Rapidly understand various product areas and community dynamics
  • Identify and promote high-leverage opportunities for design execution
  • Create aesthetically pleasing and functional interfaces for diverse product zones
  • Consider the holistic impact of designs on the Substack ecosystem
  • Facilitate meaningful relationships between creators and audiences
  • Support efforts to diversify creator types and enhance user experiences
  • Contribute to shaping the culture and processes within the design team

Benefits

  • Equity for all full-time roles
  • Exceptional benefits package
  • Flexible work options including remote work
  • Collaborative and dynamic team culture
  • Opportunity to shape a unique product platform for creatives
Full Job Description


Product Design with Engineering Characteristics

Substack is looking for a Product Designer with -to borrow a phrase from an unlikely source- "engineering characteristics." By this we mean someone with interest in and experience with the implementation of user interfaces in code, and especially someone capable and keen with LLMs and all the ways they can help design and development. What matters for this role is less mastery of a specific language, for example, than familiarity with software production processes and tools and the drive to go deeper. We're a team looking to exploit LLMs to make our work faster and better; some of us are quite technical, some of us are absolute novices to development, and we're interested in the full range of applications of LLMs, from prototyping to straight-up owning front-end.

Because the rate of change is so high, we don't feel confident about the exact skills or experiences that will make for the best candidate, so rather than saying e.g. "must be able to build everything you design" or "must be proficient in" this or that language, we're trusting that candidates who can
  • design products, features, and interfaces very ably, from complex web dashboards and flows to iOS and Android app and feed surfaces to smart televisions and so on; and
  • are ready and eager to discern how best to leverage LLMs for prototyping and production (and even pixel-fitting and bug-fixing) and capable of doing so quickly

will understand what we're looking for and whether they're the right fit to be successful here, as this team, like so many, adapts to the new landscape.

Design at Substack

Experienced designers know that commercial and economic realities shape the possibility spaces of product strategy. If success for a company means "selling more ads," designers may achieve a lovely user interface or ideal typography, but everything will be in service of producing the same strange, often-nightmarish dynamics we all know from the many scaled platforms of the past decade.

Substack does not have silver bullets for the problems of human nature, and we will not avoid the costs of creating scaled platforms. But we do have a different model, one in which we make money only when creatives of all kinds earn money from audiences who value them enough to consistently pay them. Crucially, in this model, all scales are reduced: one needs thousands, not millions, of fans, and this difference alone changes the dynamics of the platform, and thus what's possible with e.g. product architecture. As fundamental, though, is the level of trust and interest involved in paid subscriptions. "What works" for Substack is what leads people to make long-term and real investments in independent creatives and collectives, and we hope this will lead to improved outcomes in aggregate across many types of features.

If you're interested in working on this model, we'd love to chat! Design at Substack is somewhat wild, and we're looking for rigorous, robust, high-output designers who are comfortable with the vagaries and dynamism of startup life. We are not a "best practices" shop; we have very little fixed process; we work closely with executives and other functions and we're not territorial or precious. But we get to shape the development of the most promising platform for creatives, we have a lovely and weird little team, and we have a lot of fun in our quite-free and friendly company. If this sounds compelling, hit us up!

Responsibilities
  • Rapidly build context about disparate product areas, community dynamics, and industry norms in any domains, from print media to podcasting to online social systems
  • Identify high-leverage opportunities for your team and help make their pursuit practicable through rigorous path-conception, batch-sizing, staging, and go to market planning
  • Design beautiful, usable, scalable interfaces and flows for a wide range of product zones (from profiles to CRM / analytics, publication aesthetics to moderation systems, email layouts to interactive content actions, and so much more)
  • Think holistically about the second-order effects on Substack as a product system; balance user groups, weigh trade-offs, and pragmatically find solutions which achieve the best outcomes possible given various constraints
  • Find ways to help creators and audiences build long-lasting, rewarding, and healthy relationships; empower audience members to become contributors and creators
  • Help diversify the kinds of creators Substack supports, through novel media type support, alternative reader experiences, supporting outreach programs, and more
  • Shape the culture and processes of Design at Substack
Requirements
  • All product design applications must link to or include a portfolio. This portfolio needn't be overly polished, although excellently presented work might stand out; our focus will above all be on whether you've demonstrated the capacity to craft design solutions in relevant or related product areas
  • 3 years of experience designing software; we're especially keen to see experience with social networks; content networks; or content systems or products of various kinds; but any experience building software interfaces applies.
  • High degree of competence with Figma.
  • High tolerance for uncertainty and ambiguity. Substack is still becoming a company, and much remains up for debate; everything from cycle plans to organizational structure to top-line strategy can change -and will- so a certain degree of adventurousness or heartiness is required, as it can all get rather messy!
  • Interest in both independence and collaboration. Sometimes, we must be team players; at other times, we must strike out to explore and find new areas of opportunity. You should be at least comfortable with both modes of operation. If you cannot abide sometimes being asked to act as a service designer, or you cannot work without someone guiding every decision, you will struggle.
Preferences
  • Technical abilities. While it's not a requirement, we'll be very excited to see candidates who can code. Specifically, we highly value strong front-end skills, experience making and deploying sites, and experience with TypeScript and React. We're also of course very keen on candidates with SwiftUI capabilities. Current product designers with these skills use them often and to great effect, but we also appreciate that technical designers are "into software" as a whole.
    • We are also naturally interested in designers who've made use of LLMs to enhance their workflows in ways not related to product (for example with variation, prototyping, etc.)
    • Remember that these are preferences, not requirements.
  • SF Bay Area- or NYC-based. Living near our offices (in either city) means being able to work directly with colleagues, so it's very slightly preferred. But most of us -including our Head of Design- are fully remote, and remote candidates shouldn't feel discouraged from applying.

Substack's compensation package includes a market-competitive salary, equity for all full-time roles, and exceptional benefits. Our cash compensation salary range for this role is $150K - $215K / year (USD). Multiple factors, including candidate experience and expertise, determine final offer amounts and may vary from the amounts listed above.

About Substack

Substack is a platform that enables writers to publish and monetize their newsletters. The company was founded in 2017 and is headquartered in San Francisco, California. Substack provides tools for writers to manage their subscriber lists, design their newsletters, and process payments. The platform allows writers to keep a larger share of their subscription revenue than traditional media companies, and has been used by a number of high-profile journalists and writers. Substack has raised over $15 million in funding from investors including Andreessen Horowitz and Y Combinator.
Learn more about Substack
Size
50 employees
Industry
Founded
2017

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