Transforming Healthcare Together
We're shaping the future of healthcare by automating clinicians' most time-consuming tasks. Our AI-powered platform helps doctors, specialists, and allied health professionals reclaim hours every day — reducing admin, improving documentation, and freeing them up to focus on their patients.
As a senior UX/UI designer at Homerun BV, you'll be part of a fast-growing team building the kind of tech healthcare professionals actually want to use. Trusted in General Practice, Allied Health and Specialist clinics around Australia, Lyrebird is already saving clinicians up to two hours per day — and we're just getting started.
Your Key Responsibilities:
* Design Ownership: You'll own your work end-to-end — from early exploration through to shipped product. Sometimes it's a quick tweak to improve an interaction. Other times it's a deeper rethink of how doctors interact with AI in the middle of a consult.
* User Research: You'll proactively run user research — reaching out to clinicians, setting up calls, asking the right questions, and feeding real-world insights into your design process.
* Complex Problem-Solving: You'll solve complex UX challenges in a domain full of nuance, regulation, and real-world consequences.
* Collaboration: You'll collaborate with product and engineering to scope features, refine flows, and adapt designs as things take shape.
* Product Roadmap: You'll help shape the product roadmap over time — not through long strategy decks, but by being close to the work and the people using it.
* Team Collaboration: You'll pitch in across the team — giving feedback, helping a teammate unblock, or jumping into Figma to clean up someone else's flow.
What We're Looking For:
* Creativity and Craft: Strong UX and UI skills, with a sharp eye for detail across everything from complex flows to thoughtful micro-interactions.
* End-to-End Experience: You've delivered real features in real products (SaaS or similar), ideally with 6+ years designing within cross-functional teams.
* Curiosity and Initiative: You ask questions, dig in, and don't wait for permission to figure things out.
* Problem-Solving with a Product Lens: You think beyond the screen, understand how things connect, and can turn fuzzy needs into clear, usable solutions.
* Strong Communication Skills: Whether you're walking someone through your designs, writing a clear update, or giving feedback in a crit.
* Technical Awareness: You're not expected to code, but you understand how things get built and know how to work with engineers.
* User Research Confidence: You can talk to clinicians, gather insights, and fold what you learn back into your design process.
* A Healthy Respect for Accessibility, Usability, and Time Pressure: We're designing for busy professionals with real stakes.