Full-Time

Lead Product Designer

Posted on 9/11/2025

Mach9

Mach9

11-50 employees

Automates LiDAR scans into 2D/3D models

Compensation Overview

$140k - $190k/yr

San Francisco, CA, USA

In Person

Category
UI/UX & Design (1)
Required Skills
Interaction Design
UI/UX Design
Figma
Graphic Design
Requirements
  • 4+ years of product design experience, ideally in technical, data-heavy, or 3D product environments
  • Experience working on complex products with constraints related to spatial data, design precision, or engineering-driven interfaces
  • Strong visual design, interaction design, and systems thinking skills
  • Fluency in Figma and comfort working with and evolving robust design systems
  • Demonstrated ability to work hand-in-hand with engineers to ship high-quality, thoughtful interfaces
  • Comfortable moving between deep design exploration and pragmatic, iterative delivery
Responsibilities
  • Lead design for core product workflows, from 3D feature extraction to quality assurance and geospatial review
  • Partner with product, engineering, and marketing leadership to decide priorties, and ensure the shipping of quality and impactful features and products
  • Grow and mentor the design team at Mach9
  • Collaborate closely with engineers to refine prototypes into polished, high-performance user interfaces
  • Own the evolution of our design system and visual language, ensuring consistency across a growing product surface area
  • Navigate technical constraints and real-world edge cases without sacrificing user experience
  • Balance multiple priorities across customer needs, technical feasibility, and speed to value
  • Drive both long-term UX vision and fast-moving delivery in a startup environment
Desired Qualifications
  • Prior work with CAD, BIM, 3D modeling tools, or geospatial interfaces
  • Familiarity with frontend technologies (e.g., React, Three.js, TailwindCSS)
  • Experience conducting or synthesizing user research with highly specialized users
  • An eye for visual clarity and information hierarchy in high-density UIs

Mach9 provides geospatial software that converts large-scale mobile LiDAR scans into 2D and 3D engineering models. It operates as a software-as-a-service where clients upload project data and Mach9’s AI-powered processing converts image and point cloud data into actionable maps and models. The product differentiates itself from competitors by delivering faster processing (up to 30 times faster) and lower costs (about half the traditional manual methods) through automated AI workflows on scalable cloud processing. The company’s goal is to help surveying, engineering, and construction firms generate accurate, ready-to-use models efficiently so they can focus on core tasks and project delivery.

Company Size

11-50

Company Stage

Seed

Total Funding

$14.4M

Headquarters

Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

Founded

2021

Simplify Jobs

Simplify's Take

What believers are saying

  • Digital Surveyor 2 achieves 100x faster project completion for survey teams.
  • $12M seed from Quiet Capital funds team growth and product development.
  • Partners with Michael Baker International and POWER Engineers for infrastructure.

What critics are saying

  • Autodesk integrates LiDAR extraction into Civil 3D within 12-24 months.
  • Trimble embeds AI pipelines in MX systems, bypassing Mach9 in 12-18 months.
  • Esri adds native feature extraction to ArcGIS, eroding Mach9's role soon.

What makes Mach9 unique

  • Digital Surveyor 2 enables real-time AI-human collaboration for LiDAR feature extraction.
  • Supports Leica Pegasus TRK, Trimble MX90, Riegl scanners via data-agnostic pipeline.
  • Exports directly to Autodesk Civil 3D, Esri ArcGIS, Bentley Microstation formats.

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Benefits

Professional Development Budget

Growth & Insights and Company News

Headcount

6 month growth

-5%

1 year growth

3%

2 year growth

0%
Geo Week News
Feb 5th, 2026
Mach9 Unveils an AI-Assisted Workflow Focused on Trust and Control at Scale

Mach9 unveils an ai-assisted workflow focused on trust and control at scale. For surveyors working on sprawling transportation projects or complex utility corridors, the promise of AI comes with a catch. When the AI finishes processing and presents a lengthy dataset extraction, how do you verify it's correct? Where do you even start? This tension between automation's efficiency and a surveyor's desire for preciseness has shaped the evolution of Mach9's latest release of Digital Surveyor, which will debut at Geo Week 2026. Following a year of customer feedback - especially from teams overseeing complex, extended projects - the company chose to reimagine AI usability and strengthen confidence in its outputs by redesigning their workflow to center on interactive collaboration between AI and surveyors. "If ChatGPT just spits out a 40-page essay and you have to read the whole thing in order to understand all the places it's hallucinated to fix it, it's overwhelming," explains Alex Fischer. "It's not how you want to work. You'd rather work with AI to write that essay in real time, incorporating and accepting suggestions and also incorporating your own work along the way." That analogy captures the core challenge Mach9 set out to solve. Even when automated extractions were technically accurate, reviewing the entire output felt like archaeology, sifting through results to find potential errors rather than building the deliverable with confidence from the start. Bridging the gap from reality capture to production. The shift in workflow philosophy addresses a problem that extends beyond any single software tool: interoperability. Reality capture technology has advanced dramatically, with surveyors collecting increasingly rich datasets in the field. Yet translating that data into usable CAD and GIS models for engineers, designers, and construction teams remains a persistent bottleneck. That gap puts added pressure on surveyors to validate and shape data before it reaches downstream teams. "There's a huge challenge between taking reality capture data or geospatial data and turning it into usable CAD and GIS models," says Alexander Baikovitz. "There's all this great data that people are collecting out in the field, but often, rarely does it get to those that are making the designs themselves." Mach9's approach positions surveyors not just as creators of preliminary design maps, but as stewards of spatial lidar data, responsible for transforming it into actionable maps and models that different parts of an organization can actually use. This requires more than just extraction algorithms; it requires workflows that let surveyors maintain quality control while moving at the pace modern projects demand. From output review to real-time collaboration. The rebuilt workflow represents a fundamental rethinking of how AI assists during the process. Rather than generating complete automated outputs for later review, the system now works alongside surveyors as they build deliverables, offering suggestions and intelligent assistance at each step. Key improvements include clearer feedback during data selection, smarter snapping that helps geometry land where surveyors expect it, and quality assurance integrated directly into the work process. The result is a production environment where surveyors can create finished deliverables with confidence, then export them to CAD and GIS systems for downstream processing. This release specifically targets professionals working on corridor and site projects, transportation corridors, utility infrastructure, and DOT work where extraction has long been a major bottleneck. These projects are often massive in scale and complexity, with deliverable requirements that demand both speed and precision. The trust problem at scale. "Once automation works, the hard problem becomes trust, control, and usability at scale," Baikovitz emphasizes. "That's what this release is really all about, providing surveyors with the ability to create maps really fast while having control for what those maps look like and how they're delivered." It's a problem that only becomes apparent when automation starts working well enough to handle real production work. The technology can extract features accurately, but if surveyors can't easily verify that accuracy or adjust results to meet client specifications, the automation creates as many problems as it solves. Trust requires transparency, understanding what the AI is doing and maintaining control over the final product. Experience the new workflow at Geo Week. Geo Week 2026 will mark the first public demonstration of this rebuilt approach. The Mach9 team recognizes that the new workflow and integrated quality assurance are difficult to appreciate through screenshots or written descriptions alone. They need to be experienced hands-on, with real data and real project scenarios. The company plans to sit down with surveyors and geospatial professionals throughout the event, walking through actual projects and allowing attendees to work directly with the new tools. For those managing large-scale extraction projects or struggling with the transition from field data to final deliverables, it's an opportunity to see how the balance between AI assistance and human control is being recalibrated. About Digital Surveyor Digital Surveyor provides AI-assisted software solutions for surveying professionals, focusing on transforming reality capture and geospatial data into actionable CAD and GIS models for engineering, construction, and operations professionals. The information you submit will be stored and used to communicate with you about your interest in Geo Week. Geo Week News may also use this information to contact you about related products or content which align with your expressed interest in this content. You can always unsubscribe from any of its emails by following the unsubscribe information in the email. To understand more about how Geo Week News use and store information, please refer to its privacy policy. February 5, 2026 Abby is the Content Specialist for Geo Week News. She brings experience in writing and storytelling from roles at ecomaine and The Boston Women's Fund. She specializes in crafting content that engages diverse audiences and builds strong community connections. Abby currently lives in Portland, Maine where she enjoys hiking, reading, and finding new local coffee spots. Join the Discussion

The Business Journals
Nov 18th, 2024
Mach9 confirms move to San Francisco alongside $12 million seed round raise

Earlier this month, the Pittsburgh Business Times reported that Mach9, a geospatial software startup that was headquartered in Bloomfield, had raised $14.4 million per Securities and Exchange Commission filings and Pitchbook data.

Geo Week News
Nov 15th, 2024
Mach9 Raises $12M for AI Mapping

Mach9 has raised $12 million in a seed funding round led by Quiet Capital, with participation from investors like Overmatch Ventures and Kyle Vogt. The funding will support team growth and product development for their AI-powered geospatial mapping solution, Digital Surveyor. This tool converts LiDAR scans into digital maps, significantly speeding up mapping processes. Mach9's technology is already aiding infrastructure partners like Michael Baker International and POWER Engineers.

The Robot Report
Sep 16th, 2024
Mach9 Robotics Accelerates Geospatial Data Processing For Infrastructure Industry

Listen to this articleFaster production of mapping data can cut costs for the construction industry, says Mach9. Source: Mach9 Robotics. Autonomous vehicles, delivery robots, and aerial drones all rely on geospatial data, as do construction and utility firms. Mach9 Robotics Inc. said it takes 3D data from lidar scans and turns it into 2D and 3D engineering models faster and cheaper than with conventional methods. “Just as CAD software allowed GPS to revolutionize the surveying industry, we set out to build powerful tools that could unlock the potential of mobile mapping,” said the company

Securities and Exchange Commission
Jul 24th, 2024
SEC FORM D

The Securities and Exchange Commission has not necessarily reviewed the information in this filing and has not determined if it is accurate and complete.The reader should not assume that the information is accurate and complete.

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