Raul Reyeszumeta, Senior Director, Product Design, MarketScale

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Raul Reyeszumeta, Senior Director, Product Design, MarketScale

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This interview is with Raul Reyeszumeta, VP, Product & Design at MarketScale.

Raul Reyeszumeta, Senior Director, Product Design, MarketScale

As a Senior Director of Product Design at MarketScale, can you tell us about your role and the unique challenges you face at the intersection of product design, AI workflows, and digital media infrastructure?

At MarketScale, I lead product design for a platform that helps B2B companies turn everyday professionals into content creators. My focus is on building systems that make it easy for people to create high-quality media without needing a background in video production. This includes designing tools that guide users through recording, editing, collaborating, and publishing—all in one connected environment.

One of the core challenges is working across different domains. We are combining AI, video infrastructure, and user experience in a single product. The goal is not just to make features work, but to make them feel approachable and reliable. For example, we use AI to assist with tasks like editing suggestions, quote extraction, and content summarization. But we do it in a way that keeps the user in control. We want AI to support their work, not take over.

We also design for a very specific audience. Our users are professionals in fields like healthcare, logistics, and education. They are not content creators by trade, but they still need to produce content that represents their brand. That means the platform has to be fast, clear, and dependable. We spend a lot of time thinking about how to reduce friction and eliminate guesswork.

What makes this work exciting is that we are not just designing interfaces. We are shaping a workflow that blends creativity, automation, and enterprise needs. Everything has to scale, from a mobile upload in the field to a polished campaign delivered to a global audience. Design becomes the glue that holds it all together.

What inspired you to specialize in designing user experiences for non-technical professionals, and how has your journey led you to your current position?

My focus on designing for non-technical professionals comes from a career-long interest in making complex systems feel simple. Early on, I worked with professionals in healthcare, logistics, and education who had deep subject matter expertise but were underserved by digital tools. Many platforms expected users to adapt to the software rather than the other way around. That tension shaped how I approach design. I believe technology should meet people where they are.

What led me to this point is a mix of product thinking, service design, and a strong commitment to usability across real-world environments. At MarketScale, the vision comes from a clear and compelling direction set by our founder. My role is to carry that vision into the product experience, shaping tools that allow users to engage confidently without needing a background in media production or software workflows.

I see my contribution as operationalizing that vision through design. Whether it’s a logistics expert capturing video on the factory floor or a professor recording a lecture, our goal is to give them the confidence to create without friction. This requires close attention to interface design, content flows, and AI support features that feel intuitive rather than intrusive.

Over time, this work has expanded beyond interface decisions. It involves building trust, reducing cognitive load, and creating environments where people feel in control of their message. My journey has been about translating complexity into clarity, and helping users who were often overlooked become full participants in the digital content economy. That has been the most meaningful part of the work.

Can you share a specific example of how you’ve implemented AI-assisted content creation in a project, and what were the key lessons learned from that experience?

One of the most practical applications of AI I’ve helped bring to life at MarketScale was designed to support professionals who need to turn raw video into polished content without going through a full editing process. These users are experts in their own fields, like manufacturing, education, or logistics, but they are not video editors. We needed a way to help them find the best moments in a recording quickly and confidently.

At MarketScale Studio, my role is to translate that strategic direction into a user-friendly feature. We built an AI-driven quote extraction tool that analyzes a recording, identifies key moments, and presents them as ready-to-use clips. The system uses transcription, language modeling, and content ranking to surface highlights automatically, saving users hours of manual review.

The biggest design challenge was trust. Users needed to understand what the AI was doing and feel comfortable relying on its suggestions. We approached this by making every decision transparent. The interface shows why a clip was selected, allows previews, and gives users full control to edit or replace suggestions. That control was critical to ensuring adoption.

One key lesson was that users do not want automation for its own sake. They want support that respects their judgment. The design has to feel helpful and flexible, not final. When we give users clarity and control, they are more willing to embrace new tools.

This feature now supports content creation across multiple industries. It allows professionals to go from a simple video recording to a shareable, branded asset in just a few steps. For me, that outcome is what defines successful AI design—taking something complex and turning it into something people can actually use to communicate more effectively.

How do you approach designing UX for video and communication platforms to ensure they’re intuitive for non-technical users while still being powerful enough for complex tasks?

My focus is always on clarity, especially when building tools that support professionals outside of traditional media or tech roles. These users are often working quickly, across devices, and in environments where attention is limited. The platform needs to help them take action without hesitation, while still offering depth when needed.

At MarketScale, we address this by anchoring design decisions in real workflows. We ask how someone on a job site, in a classroom, or at a hospital might record, edit, or share a message without training. That context shapes everything from layout to language. The interface has to speak their language and remove guesswork.

We design for flexibility without clutter. Features are introduced progressively, and advanced options remain available but never intrusive. Feedback is constant and clear. Every click or tap should produce a response that reinforces trust and encourages the next step.

This approach supports a wide range of users across industries. Whether they are creating training content, documenting a process, or sharing insight with customers, the experience is designed to support their intent, not distract from it. In practice, that means building products that feel simple at first glance but hold up under real pressure and real use.

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