Résumé · Zixiong Wei

Product designer bridging visual systems, rapid prototyping, and frontend implementation.

I work across UI/UX, interaction design, design systems, prototyping, and implementation—using working artifacts to align product and engineering around complex ideas.

Experience

Selected roles

UX Design Engineer

Arsenal AI · Pittsburgh, PA

Dec 2025–present

  • Own end-to-end product design and frontend implementation across a consumer AI platform, an internal project-management tool, and Arsenal AI’s brand and public website.
  • Define user flows, AI interaction states, visual systems, and reusable components; implement most UI directly in the frontend codebase.
  • Partner with founders and engineers on scope, feasibility, implementation review, design critique, and UI QA.

Product Design Lead · Capstone

Advanced Robotics for Manufacturing Institute · Pittsburgh, PA

Jan–Aug 2025

  • Led a cross-functional team redesigning the member portal for a U.S. manufacturing consortium.
  • Synthesized interviews, surveys, and usability tests into product requirements and a feature roadmap.
  • Delivered an implementation-ready responsive portal and design system to the client team.

User Experience Designer

DataMesh · Beijing, China

Sep 2023–May 2024

  • Partnered with product managers and engineers on UX/UI improvements across a digital-twin SaaS ecosystem and custom enterprise products.
  • Audited and redesigned workflows across mobile, web, and desktop applications while standardizing interaction patterns.
  • Designed internal tools supporting product trials, billing, and customer support.

User Experience Research Intern

Tang UX · Shanghai, China

Jun–Aug 2023

  • Delivered customer-experience research for a kitchen-appliance brand to inform product priorities.
  • Conducted contextual inquiries and retail studies; synthesized personas, journeys, segments, and roadmap inputs.

Experience details are self-reported in the current résumé supplied by Zixiong Wei on July 17, 2026. Portfolio case studies separately apply claim-level evidence boundaries.