Mission Technius

Patient Navigation Experience

In this project case study, I will be sharing my experience designing a mobile app for a local fitness centre. The goal was to create an app that made it easy for gym-goers to view class schedules, book sessions, and track their progress.

Throughout the design process, I focused on creating an intuitive user interface that would enhance the overall user experience and encourage engagement with the app.

The team

1 × product manager
1 × product designer
2 × engineers

Mission Technius

Patient Navigation Experience

In this project case study, I will be sharing my experience designing a mobile app for a local fitness centre. The goal was to create an app that made it easy for gym-goers to view class schedules, book sessions, and track their progress.

Throughout the design process, I focused on creating an intuitive user interface that would enhance the overall user experience and encourage engagement with the app.

The team

1 × product manager
1 × product designer
2 × engineers

Mission Technius

Patient Navigation Experience

In this project case study, I will be sharing my experience designing a mobile app for a local fitness centre. The goal was to create an app that made it easy for gym-goers to view class schedules, book sessions, and track their progress.

Throughout the design process, I focused on creating an intuitive user interface that would enhance the overall user experience and encourage engagement with the app.

The team

1 × product manager
1 × product designer
2 × engineers

Project image
Project image
Project image

Business problem

Business problem

Business problem

22% annualized churn

The biggest business problem Vet Radar faced was it had a very high churn rate. It was a multi-faceted problem costing the business a lot of reoccurring revenue.

-25 NPS score

Usability is core to a product like Vet Radar. The use cases are so hands-on and vet practices get pretty intense and fast-paced, so the software needs to be fluid.

Unfortunately, our NPS reveals that the product is not meeting our customer’s expectations.

Negative perception

While we had made significant strides to improve Vet Radar and have advocate customers who love Vet Radar, we still received negative sentiments.

This incurred lost sales as we would lose out to competitors.

Customer problem

Customer problem

Customer problem

60% of our NPS comments mention usability.

“So many clicks and pages to do things, not user-friendly at all”

We often talk to our customers and use Dovetail to document and syntheize our research. We noticed a trend where users voice ambiguous problems around the software taking too many steps to do things and difficult to navigate around.

Veterinary clinicians face immense pressure and stress amidst an industry facing burnout and global staff shortages. Vet Radar has an amazing opportunity to help, yet the app is not meeting customer's expectations.

Example screenshots of our Dovetail research

Problem statement

Clinicians are understaffed and busy. Vet Radar requires excessive steps and navigation.

For customers, this means wasted time and increased stress. For the business, this contributes to a negative NPS, and a high churn rate.

Success measure

Leading indicator: Reduce time to common workflows by 50%

Lagging indicator: Reduce churn by 10% (22% to 19.8%)

Qualitative feedback (We stopped measuring NPS as it had high fluctuation)

Hypothesis 1:

Clinicians often juggle between multiple patients. Making the navigation between patients easier would allow clinicians to complete their goals faster.

Hypothesis 1:

Clinicians often juggle between multiple patients. Making the navigation between patients easier would allow clinicians to complete their goals faster.

Hypothesis 1:

Clinicians often juggle between multiple patients. Making the navigation between patients easier would allow clinicians to complete their goals faster.

Early exploration of "Global Search" idea

Hypothesis 2:

Clinicians often juggle between multiple patients. If we put more useful information and actions on the whiteboard, it will result in a faster completion time and more seamless experience.

Hypothesis 2:

Clinicians often juggle between multiple patients. If we put more useful information and actions on the whiteboard, it will result in a faster completion time and more seamless experience.

Hypothesis 2:

Clinicians often juggle between multiple patients. If we put more useful information and actions on the whiteboard, it will result in a faster completion time and more seamless experience.

Early wireframe of a reimagined whiteboard

Research and Validation

Research and Validation

Research and Validation

  1. Appcues

We put out an in-app questionnaire to a small % of our users.

38% of responses said they were solely looking for information not displayed on the whiteboard (n=77).

The vast majority of respondents who were finding information were checking for the exact due treatments that were due. Watching the session recordings matched with their statements.

  1. Survey

We sent a survey with veterinary clinicians to validate our assumptions on what information users wanted to refer to on the whiteboard. We also learned what specific workflows via the whiteboard was tedious, and various other pain points related to the whiteboard.

Here are a selection of screenshots from the survey. (n=41)

  1. Online forums

Through social media, we studied and analyzed a collection of physical whiteboards. We learned the main JTBD for the whiteboard: Why the pet is here, what’s happening in the room, and what priorities can be helped with. We also learned that most traditional whiteboards aren't too different from each other, and a lot of what customers were asking to be shown on the whiteboard aren't on traditional ones.

  1. Quant data

Utilizing Datadog, quantitative data helped fully validate exactly what were the most common actions being performed on the patient sheet. I also learned that 50% of treatment sheet sessions are spent with 5 seconds or less and 30% of whiteboard sessions are spent with 5 seconds or less. The way I interpret this is users are spending “low-quality sessions,” resulting in a very jarring navigational experience.

  1. Competitive analysis

Studying competitors gave us insight into how other digital whiteboards worked, and how they approach solving the problems I was looking to solve. Smartflow allowed full customization of fields. Instinct had a toggle to switch between two different views.

Outcome

The final outcome of the fitness centre mobile app was a user-friendly and engaging digital product that exceeded the client’s expectations.

Users were able to easily view class schedules, book sessions, and track their fitness progress, all within a seamless and intuitive app experience.

As a result, the fitness centre saw an increase in user engagement and loyalty, and the app has become an important part of their overall customer experience.

Outcome

The final outcome of the fitness centre mobile app was a user-friendly and engaging digital product that exceeded the client’s expectations.

Users were able to easily view class schedules, book sessions, and track their fitness progress, all within a seamless and intuitive app experience.

As a result, the fitness centre saw an increase in user engagement and loyalty, and the app has become an important part of their overall customer experience.

Outcome

The final outcome of the fitness centre mobile app was a user-friendly and engaging digital product that exceeded the client’s expectations.

Users were able to easily view class schedules, book sessions, and track their fitness progress, all within a seamless and intuitive app experience.

As a result, the fitness centre saw an increase in user engagement and loyalty, and the app has become an important part of their overall customer experience.

I’m Stephen — a product designer based in Sydney

I’m Stephen — a product designer based in Sydney

I’m Stephen — a product designer based in Sydney