Clay

Beautiful CRM for people who hate CRMs.

Backed byScott Belsky

5 open design roles

Clay
Product Design$160K–$250K

New York

Clay has quietly built one of the most polished products in the sales-tech space, and their design sensibility is a huge reason why. A product design role here means shaping how AI-powered workflows actually feel — rare territory where craft really matters.

Clay
Product Designer, Growth

Clay is arguably the most design-obsessed GTM product on the market right now, and growth design at a tool with this much viral loop is a rare problem space. The product gets talked about on Twitter daily, which puts real pressure on the first-touch moments. Great fit for a designer who wants to move fast on a product that already has momentum.

Clay
Brand Designer, Website$135K–$160K

New York

Clay is tackling one of software's most universally despised categories—CRMs—with a design-first approach that actually makes sense. This brand and web role sits at the intersection of making complex B2B tooling feel human and approachable, which is exactly the kind of challenge that gets great designers excited. Perfect for someone who wants to prove that enterprise software doesn't have to look like it was designed in 2003 and believes beautiful interfaces can transform how people work.

Clay
Senior UX Researcher, AI/Agents$170K–$230K

New York City

Researching how people interact with AI agents for relationship management — genuinely novel UX territory. Clay is one of the most interesting places to study human-AI interaction in a B2B context.

Clay
Brand Designer, Production$95K–$130K

New York

Clay is solving one of software's most notorious user experience problems — making CRMs that don't feel like punishment to use. This production-focused brand role is perfect for a designer who loves the intersection of beautiful craft and systematic thinking, working on a product that could genuinely change how people feel about their daily work tools. The 'people who hate CRMs' positioning suggests a company that truly gets the importance of delightful design in traditionally boring software categories.