Brian Casel's application to join 37signals as a Product Designer.
Brian Casel
Brian Casel
Product Designer

Quick facts

Designing in browsers professionally since 2005.
Living and working from Orange, Connecticut.
18-year business owner. Exploring the next chapter.
Father. Musician. Snowboarder. Mets fan.

Make every word count.

That's what I'm thinking about when I design a product—in this case, my application to join 37signals. Whether I'm crafting a UI or writing copy, I see it as my responsibility as product designer to deliver what you came here for, without wasting your time.

So let's get right to it.

Product ownership

Having designed and shipped my own products to thousands of customers, I know what it means to take ownership of a product, from concept to launch and iteration.

Bootstrapping my business over the last 18 years required me to pick up more skills than my core craft of designing in browsers with HTML and CSS.

Writing. Programming. Customer support. Hiring. Video production. Branding... I almost typed 'marketing', but if I'm honest, I believe that a product designed with care and respect for its users is the best marketing there is.

A new challenge

It's been 20 years since I sought employment at a company that's not my own. So why start now?

I see this opportunity both as a perfect fit for my skills and experience, and a totally new challenge that could define my next chapter.

The fit: The 37signals way of working—asynchronous collaboration, a focus on shipping and a commitment to the craft—have been my natural way of operating for my entire career. The chance to deepen this approach with the industry's best product team would be a total thrill.

The challenge: While I'm not new to team environments (I've hired and managed small remote teams for years), taking off the business owner's hat to focus on my sweet spot—bringing product ideas to life—will be a gear shift, for sure. But the chance to work alongside the team I've admired for years, helping shape products at a new level of scale? That makes the whole "unemployable" thing just feel silly. Let's go.

Selected work

Here's the highlight reel of some of my favorite work from the past few years.

Inspiration

2 things come to mind when I think about what inspires me professionally and creatively:

The first is something Adam Wathan recently said: When describing his ideal company, he made the analogy to the experience of playing in a band. That resonated with me—not just because I'm a lifelong musician and songwriter—but because I get fired up by seeing small, high-caliber teams shipping products that reflect their taste. 37signals and Tailwind Labs are two shining examples of that.

The other (and sorry if this is a little corny), but my daughters (8 and 11) inspire me in ways I never could have dreamed of earlier in my career. Two specifics come to mind:

  • Kids embody creativity in its purest form. Mine are too young to let the world tell them that their wildest ideas are weird or different. Observing their talent, taste, and creative muscles take form as they grow as reminded me to stay in touch with my own creative instincts in my work.
  • Seeing how kids interact with technology. I'm fascinated to see how they (and their generation) will shape new ideas, having been born into a world with internet everywhere, and now, AI.

I don't know where in the stack of applications mine will end up. But if we get the chance to meet, I would be thrilled to learn more about the possibility of working together.

Either way, I'm glad I stumbled onto this opportunity (heard it on your podcast!). Preparing this letter and site was a worthwhile project in itself.

Keep up the great work!

Brian Casel
[email protected]
Resume

The words, design and code on this page were generated by Brian's fingers. Not AI.