- Figma is a leading design platform that enables teams to collaborate on creating digital products, recently evolving into an AI-powered platform that integrates design workflows.
- In April 2026, Mike Krieger resigned from Figma's board amid concerns over competition from Anthropic's emerging AI design tools, which could impact Figma's market position.
- Figma has established partnerships with major players like Google Cloud and has reported significant revenue growth, topping $300 million in Q4 2025, driven by increased AI spending.
- Figma's ideal buyers are design teams and product managers looking for collaborative tools that enhance productivity and streamline the design process, particularly as AI integration becomes more critical in design workflows.
Engineering is the largest function with 755 employees, representing about 39% of the organization. Sales and Support follows with 373 employees (roughly 20%), and Marketing and Product includes 259 employees (around 14%). Business Management (140), Human Resources (111), Information Technology (95), and Finance and Administration (75) provide operational depth, while Operations (42), Legal (18), and Other (48) round out the team. The mix shows a substantial product and engineering core supported by customer-facing and corporate functions.
Figma’s workforce is distributed across multiple hubs, with the largest presence in San Francisco (489 employees, about 26%) and New York (315 employees, roughly 16%). Additional concentrations include London (80) and Seattle (78), with smaller teams in Los Angeles (39), Austin (28), Denver (21), Singapore (21), and Berkeley (17). The “Other” category accounts for 828 employees (about 43%), covering additional cities and regions not listed individually, indicating a broad global footprint.