AIOS is building the first vertically integrated AI doctor in Europe, and they are seeking a Product Designer to take on a senior, high-ownership role in product design. The role involves owning design projects end-to-end, improving customer-facing mobile app experiences, and enhancing internal tools and workflows while collaborating closely with the product and engineering teams.
Responsibilities:
- You take ownership of design work across products and run projects independently, from problem definition to shipped solution
- You design and improve customer-facing web and mobile app experiences. Mobile app work is a major focus area
- You work on internal products used by clinical, ops, enrolment, and CX teams, focusing on workflow, usability, and efficiency
- You work on products with real commercial and regulatory constraints. You understand that not everything can be changed freely
- You start from the business problem and the user need. You can clearly explain what problem you were solving and why
- You lead projects independently, including discovery, talking to users or internal teams, defining the solution, and shipping it
- You can articulate your thinking, defend decisions, and hold your ground in discussions with strong opinions
- You’re comfortable being senior, helping shape how design works, and supporting other designers as the team grows, without stepping away from hands-on work
Requirements:
- Experience: You've spent 3+ years designing digital products across web or mobile, including customer-facing mobile apps or internal tooling. What matters is that you've designed real products used by real people
- Robust Portfolio: Your portfolio shows real product work that shows off your design taste. We want to see the problem, the rules you had to work within, and the impact of your decisions - including polished screens of the output
- Ownership: You take loosely defined problems and run with them. You figure out what needs to be done, who to talk to, and how to move a project from idea to shipped solution. You don't need constant direction, and you don't get stuck in endless exploration
- Craft: You care about clarity and usability more than surface-level polish. You can work within fixed requirements, technical limitations, and existing systems, and still make meaningful improvements
- Clear thinking & communication: You can clearly explain what problem you were solving, why certain decisions were made, and what tradeoffs were involved. You're comfortable defending your work and navigating discussions with strong opinions
- Formal or equivalent design training: You've studied design, computer science, or a related field - or you've built the same depth of thinking through real product work
- Working in regulated and complex products: You don't need experience in healthcare specifically. What matters is that you've worked on products where design decisions are shaped by regulation, compliance, legal requirements, or strong business rules. You understand that some copy, flows, or elements can't simply be removed or redesigned, and that good design often means improving clarity and usability within those realities
- Design that gets built: You're comfortable working with engineers and thinking through implementation details. You understand how design decisions show up in real code and systems