Project Overview

Role

Lead UX/UI Designer

Team​

1 Designer, 3 Developers, 2 PMs

Project Date

Feb 2025 – Jun 2025 (5 months)

Background

It Started with a Font

Initially, the Kurlyro team only asked for minor UI updates such as font adjustments, readability improvements.


However, after reviewing the app, I uncovered deeper UX issues that disrupted warehouse operations.


I proposed broadening the scope from minor UI fixes to a holistic UX redesign, and the Kurlyro team agreed.

My Role & Responsibilities

  • Led the entire design process end-to-end, from research to delivery.
  • Initiated on-site research: shadowed warehouse staff and interviewed managers
  • Reorganized navigation and streamlined workflows
  • Designed and tested solutions that streamlined workflows and reduced manager interruptions.

Research&Discovery

How we uncovered the problems

We visited the warehouse, shadowed staff during their shifts, and observed how they used the app in real time. We also interviewed workers and managers to capture their daily frustrations.

These observations revealed recurring issues that slowed down operations, confused staff, and forced managers to spend time answering the same questions.

  • Left: Manager demonstrating how the Kurlyro app is used during daily tasks
  • Right: Observation of staff queuing for process assignments inside the warehouse

Problems

Too many questions, too little clarity

Lost track of my status

Staff couldn’t easily see which process they were currently assigned to.

Constant manager interruptions

When using the app, workers often got stuck (e.g., how to sign a contract, how to connect to the warehouse Wi-Fi) and had to repeatedly ask managers for help.

Paperwork slows everyone down

Critical but routine tasks such as submitting health check documents were not automated, requiring staff to hand them to managers directly.

Target Users

Goals

Streamline warehouse workforce management by enabling staff to work independently, minimizing manager interruptions, and making daily operations more efficient at scale.

Solution

1. Information Clarity

Clarity at a glance

Staff can instantly see whether hey’re checked in, checked out, and which task they’re working on.

Previously, staff often lost track of their work status, unsure if they had checked in or out or which process they were assigned to. By consolidating current status and recent history into a single view, the main screen made task progress and check-in/out actions immediately clear, reducing confusion and unnecessary questions.

Smarter status,
fewer distractions

The screen now adapts based on Wi-Fi connection—showing only the most relevant info for each stage.

Previously, users saw all information at once—before and after connecting to the warehouse Wi-Fi. Now, the app detects connection status to show only what’s needed, helping staff stay focused and reduce confusion.

2. Workflow Efficiency

Direct Scan, smoother shifts

Data revealed camera scanning was used 3× more often than on-screen QR due to limited barcode scanners on site.

By making camera scan the default and moving QR code to a secondary toggle, staff could handle check-ins, check-outs, and shift transitions more quickly, avoiding bottlenecks during busy periods.

Workflow Efficiency

Mandatory health check submission was shown only to the staff who needed it, with clear status badges

Before, staff had to print out their health check results and hand them to managers in person. Now, the task appears only for relevant staff in the app, making the process faster, clearer, and less error-prone.

Impact

Higher satisfaction

User satisfaction scores increased by +1.2 points on a 5-point scale after launch.

Less confusing shifts

Staff said the redesigned flow made tasks clearer and easier to follow, especially during check-in/out.

Reduced manager workload

72% of staff said they could complete tasks without repeatedly asking managers.

Higher submission rates

Health check tasks were shown only to relevant staff with clear status badges, leading to higher submission rates and fewer missed deadlines.

Exploration

Although the redesigned app solved immediate workflow issues, we also identified future opportunities:

Smarter shuttle feature

Explore ways to provide instant answers to common questions, reducing repetitive manager involvement.

AI-powered guidance

Help staff feel more secure about warehouse shuttle arrivals by visualizing location and timing.

Reflection

Working on Kurlyro taught me that even small UI requests can uncover much bigger UX challenges. By shadowing staff on-site, I saw how unclear workflows created frustration on both sides — staff losing time, and managers stuck answering the same small questions.


Standing in line with warehouse staff during a shift change gave me empathy I couldn’t get from interviews alone. It reminded me that meaningful design impact comes from deeply understanding the environment where the product lives.

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