In this article
Welcome to the world of product design
Whether you love design, psychology, and solving real user problems, or you're weighing it as a career, this guide covers what a product designer actually does, the skills, the day-to-day, and the honest upsides and downsides.
General description
A product designer designs the experience of digital products โ how they look, feel, and work โ based on real user needs. In simple terms: they make products that are useful, usable, and a pleasure to use. Think of them as the advocate for the user, balancing what people need with what the business wants and what's buildable.
- Research user needs and behaviour
- Design flows, interfaces, and interactions
- Prototype and test with users
- Work with engineers to ship the product
Key skills & qualifications
Hard skills
Soft skills
- User empathy โ designing for people, not yourself
- Problem-solving โ design is solving real problems
- Visual craft โ an eye for clean, usable interfaces
- Communication โ selling and explaining design decisions
- Collaboration โ working closely with product and engineering
- Curiosity โ always learning what users need
Education & qualifications
A portfolio matters far more than a degree. Many product designers are self-taught or come from UX, graphic design, or other fields. Demonstrable skill wins the work.
Typical responsibilities
- Research โ understanding users and problems
- Design โ flows, interfaces, and interactions
- Prototyping โ making ideas testable
- Testing โ validating with real users
- Collaboration โ with product and engineering
- Design systems โ consistent, scalable design
Responsibilities by seniority
Junior Designer
0โ2 years
- Designs to a brief
- UI and small flows
- Supports research
- Works under guidance
- Building a portfolio
Product Designer
2โ6 years
- Owns features end-to-end
- Leads research and design
- Works with product/eng
- Develops a style
- Mentors juniors
Senior / Lead / Design Manager
6+ years
- Owns product areas
- Shapes design strategy
- Leads a design team
- Builds design systems
- Influences product
Where product designers work
๐ป Tech & SaaS
Designing software products at scale.
๐ฑ Apps & startups
Shaping young products fast.
๐ E-commerce
Designing experiences that convert.
๐ฆ Fintech
Making finance usable and trusted.
๐ฎ Gaming & media
Interactive, engaging products.
๐ข Agencies
Designing for many clients.
A day in the life
Coffee and the user-research notes: a key flow confuses people, so fixing it is today's focus.
In Figma, redesigning the flow โ sketching options, then refining the one that tests best.
A usability test with five users, watching where they struggle and noting every friction point.
Working with engineers to make sure the design is buildable and pixel-perfect.
The new flow ships, and the confusion drops. Real users, helped by your design. That's the job.
What this job gives you
- Creative and strategic work
- High pay and demand
- Remote-friendly
- Tangible impact on real users
- A clear path to design leadership
Pros & cons
โ Advantages
- High pay and strong demand
- Creative and strategic
- Remote-friendly
- Portfolio beats credentials
- Tangible user impact
- Path to design leadership
- Intellectually varied
โ Disadvantages
- Competitive to break in
- Design decisions get challenged
- Balancing users and business
- Tools and trends change fast
- Can be ambiguous
- Subjective feedback
Salary potential โ global rating
Rated against all professions globally, where โ โ โ โ โ โ โ โ โ โ = top 1% earners:
Career growth paths
- Senior / Lead Designer โ own bigger product areas
- Design Manager / Director โ lead design teams and strategy
- Specialise โ UX research, interaction, or design systems
- UX strategy โ shape product direction
- Freelance / consulting โ high-value independent work
- Found a product โ designers make strong founders
Product Designer vs related roles
Here's how some neighbouring roles compare.
| Role | Core focus | Note | Pay | Entry |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Product Designer You are here | Designs digital product experiences | Figma, research | Baseline | Medium |
| UX/UI Designer | Designs interfaces and experiences | Figma, research | Similar | Medium |
| Web Designer | Designs and builds websites | Figma, HTML/CSS | Lower-similar | Medium |
| Graphic Designer | Visual design across media | Adobe Suite | Lower | Medium |
| Frontend Developer | Builds the product in code | JS, React | Similar | Medium |
Scroll the table sideways on mobile. Pay comparisons are directional and vary by market and seniority.
Future outlook
As every company becomes a software company, demand for designers who can shape great product experiences keeps growing.
- Every company needs great digital products
- AI assists design, raising the bar on strategy
- UX research and design systems are growing
- Remote work expands opportunities
- Skilled product designers stay in demand
Fun facts ๐ค
Great product design is invisible โ if users get what they came for effortlessly, you've succeeded.
Product design is deeply psychological โ it's about human behaviour as much as pixels.
It's one of the few high-paying creative fields you can learn largely through a portfolio.
Most of the job is iteration โ testing, learning, and refining, not one perfect idea.
Designers sit between users, product, and engineering โ collaboration is the whole craft.
Myths about this role
"It's just making things pretty."
โ It's solving real user problems through research, testing, and design โ usability over decoration.
"You need a design degree."
โ No โ a strong portfolio matters far more, and many designers are self-taught.
"Designers just use Figma."
โ Figma is a tool; research, strategy, and collaboration are the real work.
"It's all individual creativity."
โ It's highly collaborative, balancing users, business, and engineering.
"AI will replace product designers."
โ AI assists, but understanding users and shaping experiences stays human.
Is this job right for you?
โ Good fit if you...
- Have a strong visual and user sense
- Love solving real problems
- Are curious about people
- Collaborate well with others
- Want remote-friendly creative work
- Enjoy research and iteration
โ Maybe not for you if...
- You want a high salary with no portfolio
- You dislike feedback and iteration
- You prefer purely visual decoration
- You want to work alone
- You dislike ambiguity
- You want guaranteed, fast results
Freelance & consulting potential
Experienced product designers are in strong demand as freelancers and consultants, designing products and design systems for clients at high rates.
โ Advantages
- High rates for product design
- Strong startup and SaaS demand
- Remote-friendly
- Varied, cutting-edge projects
- Build your own products
โ Challenges
- Need a strong portfolio first
- You find your own clients
- Income varies
- Competitive market
- Scope creep from clients
How to get started
- Learn design fundamentals UX, UI, interaction, and user research.
- Master Figma the industry-standard design tool.
- Build a portfolio real or concept projects that show your process and results.
- Get a role or freelance junior product or UX roles, or small client projects.
- Develop UX research understanding users is what makes design great.
What to know before you start
- Portfolio is everything โ show your process
- It's about users, not just aesthetics
- Iteration and testing are the real work
- Collaboration with engineering matters
- Add UX research to stand out
- It's a clear path to design leadership
From the field
The same lessons come up again and again from people actually doing the job:
The portfolio got me hired โ nobody asked about my degree. Showing how I think through a problem mattered more than any qualification.
Product designer ยท 4 years in
Stop polishing pixels and start testing with users. The redesign I was proudest of failed in testing; the ugly one users loved taught me the real job.
Senior designer ยท 8 years in
Learning UX research transformed my career. The designers who understand why users behave as they do are the ones who get promoted to lead.
Design manager ยท 12 years in