About Relay
Relay is building a new collaborative workflow automation tool. Relay makes it easy for teams to build and automate complex collaborative playbooks, so they can save time and bring consistency and quality to repetitive workflows like onboarding new customers, launching new features, and preparing for new hires. It takes time and effort to run effective processes; Relay makes workflows automatic without feeling robotic.
When you join Relay, you’re joining an exceptionally talented team that is passionate about building useful productivity tools to make work easier. As a seed stage startup, we’re at the exciting point of bringing our early access product to the public and partnering closely with our early customers to build an experience they love.
Learn more about Relay at https://relay.app/ and the team here.
About the role
- You’ll play a major role in evolving our early access product into a highly polished, user-friendly, well architected tool
- You’ll work closely with our founding designer, head of product, and exceptional engineering team to envision, design, prototype, and spec new features and product improvements
- You’ll interview users and customers to understand needs and identify opportunities to make Relay a better, more useful tool
- You’ll have significant impact on Relay’s product design, architecture, visual design, accessibility, and design system
Qualifications
We’re open to any previous experience that makes you a good fit for this position. Some of these qualifications will be helpful:
- 3+ years of professional experience as a product/interaction/UI/UX designer
- Experience working in productivity tools or a similar field
- Experience designing for both web and mobile platforms
- Excited to iterate and learn quickly in an early startup environment
These qualifications aren’t required but will be helpful in this role:
- Proficiency in using Figma
- Experience designing UI for a complex software application
- Strong visual design skills
- Familiarity building design systems
- Familiarity with designing for accessibility