Senior Product Designer Job Description Template
We're hiring a Senior Product Designer to lead design on a complex area and mentor. You'll work in a small, senior team that ships, owns its outcomes, and treats teammates and candidates with respect. This senior product designer role sits at the intersection of execution and judgement: it's a position where the right hire compounds the team's output for years, and the wrong hire quietly drains it. Use this template as a starting point — adapt the responsibilities to your actual stage, replace the salary band with your local market data, and rewrite the opening paragraph in your own voice. The structure (mission → responsibilities → requirements → nice-to-have → comp) is the part worth keeping; the prose is the part worth replacing.
About the role
We're hiring a Senior Product Designer to lead design on a complex area and mentor. You'll work in a small, senior team that ships, owns its outcomes, and treats teammates and candidates with respect.
Why this hire matters
Senior senior product designers are the multiplier hires every team underestimates. They don't just do the work; they raise the bar on what 'good' looks like, mentor the rest of the team into it, and make architecture decisions whose consequences will outlast their tenure. The cost of a bad senior hire isn't just the salary — it's 12–18 months of compounding decisions you have to unwind.
Responsibilities
- Own end-to-end UX for an area
- Run usability research and synthesise insight
- Maintain and extend the design system
- Partner with PM and engineering through delivery
- Raise the craft bar across the team
Requirements
- Portfolio with shipped B2B or consumer work
- Strong systems thinking
- Comfort partnering with engineering
- High craft bar
Nice to have
- Front-end fluency (HTML/CSS)
- Motion design experience
- Brand background
- Background in craft mentorship
Salary range
$120k–$190k depending on region and seniority
Anchor on local market data; publish the band on the JD itself. "Competitive" is not a band.
How to measure success in the first year
- Design quality reviews (peer + leadership)
- Cross-functional satisfaction (engineering, PM, research)
- Design system contributions and adoption
- User-facing metrics tied to shipped work
- Velocity from concept to production
A day in the life
- 09:00Triage inbox and Slack — handle anything time-critical, defer the rest.
- 10:00Heads-down on the highest-leverage piece of work for this week.
- 12:30Lunch or a working call with a cross-functional partner.
- 14:00Stakeholder sync — update on progress, surface blockers, agree next steps.
- 15:30Block of focused work on the second priority of the week.
- 17:00Documentation, reviews, async write-ups.
- 17:45End-of-day note — what shipped, what's next, what's blocked.
Hiring playbook
A six-stage loop that consistently lands strong senior product designer hires in 6–10 weeks.
Publish this JD on your careers page and 2–3 specialised boards relevant to senior product designer hiring. Brief 3–5 internal referrers with a one-paragraph 'who we're looking for'. Most strong senior product designers are referred, not applied.
30-minute async or live screen against the top 3 requirements. Reject fast where the must-haves aren't there; advance fast where they are. Don't over-screen — the next stage does that work better.
One realistic, paid (or take-home if short) work simulation that mirrors what the role actually does. Keep it under 3 hours. Score against a written rubric the candidate sees in advance.
Three 45-minute interviews: hiring manager (mission + ownership), peer (collaboration + craft), cross-functional partner (judgement + communication). Independent scoring, then a 30-minute debrief.
Two backchannel + two formal references, ideally including one direct manager and one peer. Ask 'would you re-hire them tomorrow?' and 'what kind of role do they thrive in?'.
Verbal offer first, written within 24 hours. Be transparent about comp band, vesting, and growth path. Move fast — every day a strong candidate has competing offers is a day you might lose them.
Interview scorecard
Six dimensions. Score 1–5 independently before debrief; surface evidence first, opinions second.
Genuinely energised by what a senior product designer does day-to-day, not by the title or comp.
Demonstrable depth in the work — past artefacts, working session output, references.
Makes the right call under ambiguity. Spots the second-order effects we missed.
Talks in terms of outcomes they delivered, not roles they held. Names trade-offs they made.
Clear in writing, in interviews, and in the working session. Listens before answering.
Raises the bar on the people around them. Direct, kind, low-drama.
Red flags to watch for
- Speaks only about teams and titles, never about specific outcomes they personally drove.
- Can't name a recent decision they regret or what they learned from it.
- Negative or dismissive about every previous employer.
- Asks no real questions about the role, the team, or the company beyond comp and title.
- Working-session output is polished but generic — the same answer they'd give any company.
- Reference checks come back lukewarm or evasive on the 'would you re-hire?' question.
Frequently asked questions
Six to ten weeks end-to-end is a healthy benchmark for senior product designer hires. Faster than four weeks usually means you're skipping signal-gathering steps; slower than twelve weeks means strong candidates are lost to competing offers. Run the loop in parallel where you can: sourcing alongside referrals, screens alongside working sessions.
Lead with a transparent salary band on the JD itself — it filters out misaligned candidates and signals that you respect their time. Pair base salary with equity (if relevant), benefits, and a realistic articulation of growth. Avoid 'competitive' as a band; it tells candidates you're hoping they'll under-ask.
Yes, for ranking and shortlisting against the documented requirements — it's faster, more consistent, and easier to audit than the alternative of recruiters doing it manually under time pressure. Keep humans in the loop on every reject, publish an annual bias audit, and never use AI to score for fit on protected characteristics or proxies.
Optimising for impressive credentials over demonstrated outcomes. The best senior product designers have a portfolio of specific things they shipped, decisions they made, and trade-offs they owned — not a CV full of brand names. The working session and the references are where this signal lives; weight them heavily.
Yes — the structure works in any model. For remote, add explicit lines on async-first communication, written documentation as a default, and the timezone overlap you expect. For hybrid, be specific about which days are in-office and what people use the in-office days for (collaboration, mentoring, customer visits — not 'because we said so').
Keep going. Cross-pollinate.
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