When people think about a UX vision, they often imagine a short, aspirational statement.
But for me, a vision is only valuable if it’s operationalized — if it gives teams clear priorities and leaders clear outcomes to measure.
This is how I approached defining and executing the UX vision for two products: Suzy (B2B insights platform) and Crowdtap (B2C community).
Step 1 – Listen Before Leading
I began by gathering input from multiple sources:
Stakeholder business goals – What leadership needed to achieve in the next 12–18 months.
Consumer sentiment – Pain points and aspirations directly from users.
Design debt – The gaps, inconsistencies, and inefficiencies uncovered in product audits.
By combining these perspectives, I avoided a “design-only” vision and ensured the foundation was cross-functional from day one.
Step 2 – Craft Focused Vision Statements
With the insights synthesized, I created two tailored vision statements — one for each product:
Suzy:
Empower users of all skill levels to create high-quality surveys and uncover actionable insights through intuitive, transparent, and innovative tools that drive confident, informed decisions.
Crowdtap:
Create an inclusive, rewarding experience that motivates meaningful participation, fosters trust, and builds long-term community engagement.
These weren’t just feel-good phrases. They were the anchor points that every future decision had to align with.
Step 3 – Translate Vision into Strategic Pillars
I distilled the vision into five pillars — broad enough to guide multiple teams, specific enough to prioritize work:
Guided First Steps – Remove uncertainty from onboarding and navigation.
Task Focus & Efficiency – Streamline creation flows, reduce cognitive load.
Insight at a Glance – Make dashboards true decision-making hubs.
Humanized Engagement – Use AI, community features, and personalization to deepen participation.
Consistency & Scalability – Create alignment across web and app experiences.
Step 4 – Define Tactical Initiatives with Measurable Outcomes
For each pillar, I identified tactical projects tied to measurable impact.
Pillar | Initiative | Expected Impact Metric |
---|---|---|
Guided First Steps | Tailored onboarding with “Get Started” hub | ↑ First-time task completion |
Task Focus & Efficiency | Hide nav during creation; structured left/right editor | ↓ Task abandonment |
Insight at a Glance | Data-rich dashboards with key metrics & trends | ↑ Return visits |
Humanized Engagement | AI narration/video previews; voice response | ↑ Engagement quality |
Humanized Engagement | Community leaderboards & streak rewards | ↑ Monthly active users |
Consistency & Scalability | Cross-platform design system adoption | ↓ UX inconsistencies |
Step 5 – Phase the Work to Avoid Overwhelm
Not every initiative could launch at once. I mapped a Now / Next / Future approach:
Now (0–3 mo): Navigation simplification, onboarding hub, dashboard MVP.
Next (3–6 mo): Creation flow redesign, AI previews, basic community features.
Future (6+ mo): AI quality check, advanced personalization, global survey cloning.
The Result
By the time I presented this to leadership, it wasn’t just a “vision deck.” It was a clear bridge from high-level strategy to execution-ready initiatives, each linked to a metric.
The team could see how their day-to-day work fit into the bigger picture. Leadership could see the business impact. And users? They could feel the improvements almost immediately.
Key Takeaway:
A UX vision should inspire, yes — but more importantly, it should direct action.
Because in the end, the best UX vision isn’t about what you want to be.
It’s about how you’ll get there.