u/Mack_Kine

[FOR HIRE] UI/UX Designer – SaaS, Landing Pages, Web Apps or a website

Taking on 1–2 design projects this month.

I help startups and businesses with:

• SaaS dashboard UI

• landing page redesigns

• web app interfaces

• product UI cleanup

• design systems

Fast turnaround.

Dev-friendly Figma files.

No bloated agency pricing.

Rates start from $400 depending on scope.

DM if you're building something.

reddit.com
u/Mack_Kine — 2 days ago

[FOR HIRE] UI/UX Designer – SaaS, Landing Pages, Web Apps

Taking on 1–2 design projects this month.

I help startups and businesses with:

• SaaS dashboard UI

• landing page redesigns

• web app interfaces

• product UI cleanup

• design systems

Fast turnaround.

Dev-friendly Figma files.

No bloated agency pricing.

Rates start from $150 depending on scope.

DM if you're building something.

reddit.com
u/Mack_Kine — 2 days ago

[FOR HIRE] UI/UX Designer – SaaS, Landing Pages, Web Apps under $300

Taking on 1–2 design projects this month.

I help startups and businesses with:

• SaaS dashboard UI

• landing page redesigns

• web app interfaces

• product UI cleanup

• design systems

Fast turnaround.

Dev-friendly Figma files.

No bloated agency pricing.

Rates start from $300 depending on scope.

DM if you're building something.

reddit.com
u/Mack_Kine — 2 days ago

Most landing pages don’t have a design problem. They have a messaging problem.

I keep seeing startup websites that look visually decent but fail at basic communication.

Examples:

- “AI-powered” but does what?

- huge feature lists, zero clarity

- no trust signals

- CTA before explaining value

A landing page should answer:

What is this?

Who is this for?

Why should I care?

Pretty design helps.

Clarity closes.

reddit.com
u/Mack_Kine — 2 days ago

Founders: what part of your product are users pretending to understand?

Every product has one.

That screen where users pause for 8 seconds and silently question life.

Usually it's:

- onboarding

- dashboard clutter

- settings overload

- unclear buttons

- weird navigation logic

As a designer, I’ve noticed founders often focus on adding features while ignoring friction.

Which part of your product feels like this?

reddit.com
u/Mack_Kine — 2 days ago

[For Hire] Product / UI Designer 20$/hour

Currently available for:

• SaaS UI

• Landing pages

• Web app design

• Product redesigns

I focus on making complex products feel simple and usable.

Fast turnaround. Practical design. No fluff.

Rates start from $450 depending on scope.

DM if you need help.

reddit.com
u/Mack_Kine — 3 days ago

UI/UX Designer for SaaS, Landing Pages & Web Apps

What I can help with:

• SaaS dashboard UI

• Landing page design / redesign

• Web app interfaces

• Mobile app UI concepts

• Design systems / component libraries

• Website redesigns

My focus is simple: Clean UI, clear hierarchy, usability first.

Not flashy Dribbble nonsense that developers hate building.

Typical pricing:

• Landing pages: from $150

• UI redesigns: from $200

• Larger product work: custom pricing

Fast turnaround, clear communication, dev-friendly files.

If you’re building something and need design help, feel free to DM me with your project.

reddit.com
u/Mack_Kine — 3 days ago

What’s a fair budget for redesigning a startup landing page?

Curious what founders actually expect here.

Say:

  1. homepage redesign

  2. improved messaging structure

  3. mobile responsive design

  4. dev-ready Figma

What feels fair?

I’ve worked on landing pages + SaaS UI and pricing expectations are all over the place.

Would love honest answers.

(This post gets engagement + DMs. Sneaky? Efficient.)

reddit.com
u/Mack_Kine — 6 days ago

If your product needs a tutorial before users understand it, design probably failed

Harsh, but mostly true.

A good interface should reduce thinking.

Especially for: SaaS tools, dashboards, internal systems, onboarding flows

I spend most of my design time removing friction, not adding decoration.

What’s the most confusing product UI you’ve used recently?

reddit.com
u/Mack_Kine — 6 days ago

Biggest design lesson I learned working with startups

Founders often ask for “modern UI.”

But modern isn’t the problem.

The real issue is usually one of these:

-users don’t know what to do next

-too much information at once

-no hierarchy

-everything looks clickable

or nothing does...

  1. Clean UI helps.

  2. Clear UX makes money.

That distinction changed how I design products.

reddit.com
u/Mack_Kine — 6 days ago

what design problem keeps getting pushed because “we’ll fix it later”?

Genuine question.

Is it:

-onboarding?

-dashboard UX?

-landing page conversion?

-mobile responsiveness?

-design consistency?

I’ve noticed a lot of teams delay design issues until users start complaining.

Which usually costs more later.

What’s your “we know it’s broken but…” problem?

reddit.com
u/Mack_Kine — 6 days ago
▲ 3 r/SaaS

Why do so many SaaS landing pages explain everything except the actual product?

I’ve been reviewing startup landing pages lately, and the same issues keep showing up:

vague hero copy, 6 CTAs fighting each other, pretty UI but zero trust, features before explaining the problem

Most founders think they need “better design.”

Usually they need clearer communication.

A decent landing page should answer in 5 seconds:

  1. What is this?

  2. Who is it for?

  3. Why should I care?

Curious what landing page mistake annoys you most?

(I redesign these a lot, so this pain is painfully familiar.)

reddit.com
u/Mack_Kine — 6 days ago

Are you starting that idea.. that you always thought of working?

If yes.. then where have you reach.. if not why you didn't started?

reddit.com
u/Mack_Kine — 15 days ago

Like I have tried multiple posts sharing in different ways about my work and services, but I didn't think I get that much traction or clients, so what about you?

reddit.com
u/Mack_Kine — 17 days ago