Create Experiences Users Love
User-centered design for web and mobile applications. We combine research, prototyping, and visual design to create interfaces that are intuitive, accessible, and delightful to use.
Design that bridges user needs and business goals
Good design is invisible. Users don't notice when an interface is well-designed—they just know it works. Bad design, however, screams for attention through frustration, confusion, and abandoned tasks. At Devionary, we focus on creating interfaces that feel natural, guide users toward their goals, and minimize cognitive load.
UI/UX design is not just about making things look pretty. It's about understanding user behavior, identifying pain points, mapping user journeys, and creating solutions that are both functional and aesthetically pleasing. We conduct user research, build prototypes, test with real users, and iterate based on feedback.
Our design process is collaborative. We work closely with your team and end-users to ensure the final product aligns with both user needs and business objectives. Whether you're redesigning an existing application or building something new, we bring structure, empathy, and craft to every project.
UI/UX Services We Offer
User Research
Interviews, surveys, usability testing, and heuristic evaluations to understand your users' needs, pain points, and behaviors. Data-driven design decisions, not guesswork.
Wireframes & Prototypes
Low-fidelity wireframes to map user flows, high-fidelity interactive prototypes to test concepts before development. Rapid iteration without writing code.
Visual Design
Clean, modern interfaces with consistent typography, color systems, spacing, and iconography. Design systems that scale across your product.
Interaction Design
Smooth transitions, micro-interactions, and animations that guide users and provide feedback. Making interfaces feel responsive and alive.
Accessibility (a11y)
WCAG-compliant designs that work for everyone, including users with disabilities. Semantic HTML, keyboard navigation, screen reader support, and color contrast.
Design Systems
Reusable component libraries, style guides, and documentation to ensure consistency across your product and speed up development.
Our UI/UX Design Process
Discovery & Research
We start by understanding your users, business goals, and constraints. User interviews, competitor analysis, and stakeholder workshops help us build a foundation for design decisions.
Information Architecture & User Flows
Map out the structure, navigation, and user journeys. We identify key paths users take and ensure the architecture supports their goals with minimal friction.
Wireframing & Prototyping
Create low-fidelity wireframes to establish layout and content hierarchy, then build interactive prototypes in Figma to test flows and gather feedback before committing to visual design.
Visual Design & Design System
Apply your brand guidelines or create a new visual language. Build a component library with buttons, forms, cards, and other UI elements that maintain consistency throughout the app.
Usability Testing & Iteration
Test prototypes with real users to identify confusion, friction points, and areas for improvement. Use feedback to refine the design before handoff to development.
Developer Handoff & Collaboration
Provide detailed specs, design tokens, and component documentation to developers. We collaborate throughout implementation to ensure pixel-perfect execution and address edge cases.
Design Tools & Platforms
We use industry-standard tools to create, prototype, and collaborate efficiently.
Design & Prototyping
- • Figma (primary tool)
- • Adobe XD
- • Sketch (legacy projects)
- • Adobe Illustrator
Research & Testing
- • UserTesting
- • Hotjar for heatmaps
- • Google Analytics
- • Lookback for interviews
Collaboration
- • Miro for workshops
- • FigJam for brainstorming
- • Notion for documentation
- • Loom for async feedback
When to engage a UI/UX designer
Before development starts
Ideally, UX design happens before any code is written. It's cheaper and faster to iterate on prototypes than to rebuild features. Invest in design upfront to avoid costly rework later.
When users are confused
If your support team is overwhelmed with "how do I...?" questions, or analytics show high drop-off rates, it's a sign that your UX needs improvement. Usability testing can identify the friction points.
Redesigning for growth
As your product evolves and adds features, the initial design may no longer fit. A strategic redesign can consolidate navigation, improve information architecture, and refresh the visual language.
Entering new markets
Different user segments have different needs. If you're expanding to enterprise from B2C, or entering a new geographic market, your UX should adapt to new user expectations and cultural norms.
Ready to improve your product's UX?
Whether you're designing from scratch or improving an existing interface, let's talk about your users and goals.
