After gathering my user testing results, I went back through the feedback and started to apply the changes into my design.

<aside> <img src="/icons/link_lightgray.svg" alt="/icons/link_lightgray.svg" width="40px" />

Here you can view the file where I have written notes about the changes:

https://www.figma.com/design/Wc4N8KjJXz1kk1imcazojy/Memori?node-id=735-27393&t=vcQoIXSu32fhGKPh-1

</aside>

Screenshot 2026-05-05 at 00.05.50.png

Screenshot 2026-05-05 at 00.06.21.png

Screenshot 2026-05-05 at 00.06.36.png

Screenshot 2026-05-05 at 00.07.57.png

Screenshot 2026-05-05 at 00.08.09.png

Screenshot 2026-05-05 at 00.10.04.png

Screenshot 2026-05-05 at 00.10.26.png

Copy Changes

I decided to change my copy from title case to sentence case, using a capital letter only at the beginning of each title and lowercase for the rest. I asked Claude for guidance on how to present my copy. From my placement experience, I realised how important UX writing can be, so I wanted to make sure this was reflected clearly in my final project.

Screenshot 2026-05-03 at 22.25.46.png

Screenshot 2026-05-03 at 22.26.29.png

Resizing Screens

I then noticed during my user testing that a lot of my screens were moving slightly between each frame. To fix this I spent a few hours taking the content out and placing everything into the same screen dimensions and layout. This helped remove any bouncing between screens. I felt like it was really affecting the overall feel of my app, so I wanted to make sure the experience felt smooth and coherent.

Reflection

It was challenging at times especially because there were so many screens, features and interactions to consider, but I feel like the final prototype shows how much the project developed. After incorporating changes based on my user testing feedback, the app feels more refined, easier to use, and more complete. Personally, without doing the user testing, I feel I would’ve missed a lot of small mistakes.

https://youtu.be/zyMegliGTjU