Project overview
- Company
- Comcast
- Product Owner
- Central Division Tech Ops
- Date
- 2023-2024
UI Design Overview
My Role
User Research
Information Architecture
User Flow design
Low Fidelity Wireframe design
Design Tools
HTML
UX Deliverables
Information Architecture
Site Map design
Low fidelity Interactive Prototype/Wireframe
UI and UX design
High Fidelity Mockup Design
Design Concept Presentations
Introduction
The Resource Management Tool (RMT) is a scheduling and ticketing application which manages over 10,000 field technicians. Primarily, it provides a comprehensive overview of Technical Operations in real-time. The Tech Ops team uses it to manage technician schedules, onboarding and dispatch more efficiently. I was responsible for redesigning the entire user interface and helping to transform a legacy Microsoft Access platform into a modern cloud based web application.
Design Problem
A key objective of the project was to leverage UX design best practices such as consistent navigation, meaningful visual hierarchy and layout while creating a design that adapts to various user needs and business requirements. Since the legacy application did not have a consistent UI design, one of the major challenges was understanding the various task flows and interactions. After several sessions of usability testing, certain interaction patterns emerged and I was able to design consistent UI elements to achieve user tasks.
Design Solution
Working collaboratively with the product and development teams, I was able to create a modular user interface that provides multiple access levels depending on current user role. Visibility of the various interface components is configurable and adaptable to business needs.
For example Tech Ops agents use the tool daily for Tech Profile updates or to check status of previous tickets. Agents need quick access to most recently updated tickets and also quick update for specific techs. The solution included a data table with sort and search features and update ticket page just two clicks from the landing page.
Design Process
As with any UX design project, the project deviated slightly from the ideal process shown below. There was some overlap between the Define, Research and Build phases. Throughout the process all stakeholders including product owners and software developers were involved and this was a highly collaborative team effort.
User Research
A deep understanding of the user, is the main goal of the research phase. Since the product owners would also be using the tool, it was important to differentiate the various user roles. After several meetings with stakeholders including the product team and business analyst, the following roles were identified:
- RMT Administrator
- Quota Team Coordinator
- Tech Ops Agent
My research was mainly qualitative and included surveys and user interviews with employees in the Installation & Service team as well as Business Support & Analytics. A total of 6 employees were interviewed. Interviews were conducted via video calls and email surveys / questionnaires.
Research Findings
- RMT is used daily to perform very important routing and dispatch workflow tasks and for updating tech schedules
- The tool is used in conjunction with other applications and data is transferred automatically, however sometimes agents need to update data manually
- The user interface is highly dependent on the underlying database structure and not optimized for user tasks or needs
Personas
User Flows
Creating user flows involved defining important tasks and workflows that users would perform while using RMT. Common tasks such as processing technician tickets, running tech shift validation reports were identified. At this point we realized that there was a relationship between user roles and tasks. Certain tasks like approving time off requests could only be performed by the Tech Ops role. On the other hand tasks like reviewing a ticket could be made by all roles.
User Journey Map
A typical user journey map for a Tech Ops agent making a profile update request. Starting from the beginning a new work shift, with email reviews. When the agent reads an urgent profile update request he immediately clicks the embedded link and logs into the tool. The user journey continues through the request processing steps until approval is granted and tickets is closed
Information Architecture
Based on the business requirements and user feedback, high level content categorization and taxonomies were identified. The task flows also helped in defining common entry and exit points as well as organizing content into related categories.
Low Fidelity Wireframes & Prototype
After the information architecture was finalized, the next step involved translating the diagrams into low fidelity wireframes.
High Fidelity UI Design
UI Design Kit
Before the final high fidelity mockup was designed, the visual exploration step included a style guide. This helped to create a consistent look and feel for the UI elements
UI Design Before & After
- Technician name is displayed separate from the select form element, also highlighted to show visual hierarchy. Other relevant information, tech number and supervisor name also displayed.
- Tab style is updated and consistent with design system used through out the application
- Technician calendar design is improved, each item is in a component and grouped into a single unit applying proximity and similarity principles.
High Fidelity UI Mockup
The wireframing step required several iterations due to user feedback. After the wireframes were accepted by the team, high fidelity UI mockups were designed
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