Jess Eddy starts with an advantage product designers often overlook: much of the job already involves finding unmet needs, reducing ambiguity, and giving an organization something concrete to respond to.
If you are a product or UX designer, you already hold a “wildcard” that makes you uniquely suited for this journey. Your craft and problem-solving skills align naturally with corporate innovation. Designers are natural change-makers. They’re trained to step into users’ shoes, spot unmet needs, make sense of complex problems, and imagine better ways of doing things.
In fact, design’s core human-centered methodologies: discovery, ideation, prototyping, and testing closely mirror modern lean startup practices. When you facilitate a design workshop, advocate for user research, or map user journeys, you are already embodying the role of an intrapreneur within your organization.
Your greatest advantage is your ability to make ideas tangible.
Making the idea tangible gets attention. Eddy’s test is whether the designer remains responsible long enough for that idea to create value.
In a corporate environment, the comfort of a steady paycheck can make it easy for designers to focus on work that feels innovative but doesn’t actually move the business forward. Sometimes, leaders and managers may even encourage this. “Innovation theater” is when teams prioritize appearances, like running workshops, polishing slide decks, or endlessly redesigning dashboards, without ever delivering meaningful value to users.
The real benchmark of intrapreneurship is whether your work results in products that reach customers and deliver measurable business value. The number of design sprints you run is far less important than the impact you create. To avoid the theater trap, regularly ask yourself: “What measurable outcome am I creating, changing, or improving?”
The trap is measuring the ceremony around innovation while avoiding responsibility for what ships. Eddy’s next step is business fluency:
Speaking the language of business means reframing design in terms of business outcomes. As a designer-intrapreneur, your goal is to connect design decisions to their financial or operational impact, whether that’s driving revenue, reducing costs, improving retention, accelerating time-to-market, or mitigating risk.
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Strategic intrapreneurs don’t wait for a brief. They spot problems, form hypotheses, and proactively pitch solutions. To move from task execution to business experimentation, use this disciplined, business-driven formula:
“We believe [change] will result in [metric improvement] for [user group] by [amount] in [time]”.
The strategic seat comes with co-owning the result all the way through. Design artifacts are evidence along the way, never the finish line.

The product designer’s guide to becoming an intrapreneur
Product designers already hold a wildcard for corporate innovation: the ability to make ideas tangible. The test is staying responsible long enough for the idea to create value.






















