UX Improvement Projects
Larger UX initiatives, such as new features, interface redesigns, or cross-module improvements, follow a structured project lifecycle. This process ensures alignment across the team and produces well-documented, tested deliverables.
Project Selection
The UX team maintains a backlog of planned projects. Projects are selected based on priority, available resources, and alignment with ecosystem goals (such as upcoming Drupal CMS releases).
Once a project is selected, the Product Manager, in collaboration with the Product Owner, assembles a team that typically includes a UX designer, UX researcher and relevant developers.
Phase 1: Discovery
Every project begins with a kickoff meeting that brings together the Product Manager, UX designer/researcher, and the broader UX team. The goal is to align on scope early and gather input from people familiar with different parts of the system.
During discovery, the team:
- Defines scope - What problem are we solving? What's in and out of scope?
- Documents user journeys - How do users currently accomplish this task?
- Captures existing UI - Screenshots of current interfaces for reference
These deliverables are reviewed at the weekly UX meeting. The team discusses the approach and decides whether to proceed to design.
Phase 2: Design
Once the discovery phase is approved, design work begins.
Wireframes are created first to establish layout, information hierarchy, and interaction patterns. These are added to the shared Figma board and reviewed at the weekly meeting.
If the project requires visual design work (custom styling, new UI, illustrations), mockups are created after wireframes are approved. Projects without custom styling may skip mockups and move directly to development.
Phase 3: Development
With approved designs in hand, the project is assigned to a developer or development team. The developer builds the feature while referencing the wireframes and mockups.
During development, a UX evaluation is conducted by the UX designer and/or researcher to verify that the implementation aligns with the intended design and user experience.
Phase 4: Quality Assurance
Once development is complete, the feature enters QA review:
- QA team tests the implementation against requirements
- Issues are logged and addressed
- The QA/fix cycle continues until the feature passes
When QA passes, the feature is tagged for release and shipped.
Weekly Checkpoints
Each phase includes a review at the weekly UX meeting (Mondays). This keeps projects moving, surfaces blockers early, and ensures the broader team has visibility into progress.
Projects that don't receive approval at a checkpoint return to the previous phase for revision before proceeding.
How It Works
