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Aircraft Health Management System

An aerospace client needed a product that enabled monitoring airplane parts and alerting the client when service or new parts are needed.

PROBLEM:


The client had a clear vision on how the product should perform but not much in the area of what it should look like.


As much as this was a product design project, it was also about visualizing real and meaningful data. That is what we focused on first based on how it was going to be used. Some discovery was performed already but all based on the previous iteration of the product.


Our team was brought in to design and develop the 2.0 version. Ultimately, our client wanted to offer the product as a white label product to commercial airlines across the world.


APPROACH:


We had three months to produce a full prototype, but we had five weeks to produce a MVP demo for an industry conference that our client was attending. And the demo came first.


My partner on the project became the lead for the agile scrum team and I was the UX lead working with the development team. I also played a negotiator role between the product owner and the stakeholders. With all of the research preformed and requirements determined, I first needed to validate that the current state assessment was correct and that came from interviews from engineers that designed the parts the product was intended to monitor. With discovery validated and a success criteria determined, I was ready to design the demo. When the demo was introduced at the conference it got great reviews from those in attendance but it also got some insight on where the full prototype need to make some improvements.


SOLUTION:


But with the improvements came a new need for further validation. This time I conducted tests with engineers from our client’s customers: the airlines. This hands-on access to the actual users helped us refine our design to the exact specifications our end-users were expecting and shaved off rounds of iterations and weeks off the delivery time. This success of this project lead to three more projects and eight more months with the client that became the anchor for my former employer to open a new office in that market.


Numbers that matter

30

Interviewed

50

Tested

9

Month Project

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