| Category | Industry | What we did | Platform | Project scope | Project cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Enterprise | Business Compliance | New Design | Web | 8 months, 250 screens | $95,000 |
This client asked us to design the user experience for their new web application that would integrate their previous-generation offering of eight separate products. Over the span of eight months we produced wireframe mockups of the UI, many visual design concepts, and wrote the HTML and CSS that was directly incorporated into the coding of over 250 screens in the web application. We also wrote a 400-page User Interface Specification for the development team. Thanks to our work, the company was acquired shortly after the launch of this web application.

OUR DESIGN
Each component of this enterprise-scale web application was complex, dealing with scalable user interfaces based on user permissions. Notice that this is the user interface for System Administrators-who said it had to be difficult to use?
(Too bad they chose the green background-scroll down to see other visual styles we developed)

OUR DESIGN
The user experience for reviewing your quarantined mail messages. Notice the powerful filtering and easy icon-based navigation.

OUR DESIGN
The user experience for investigations-this web application was intended to help companies comply with the Sarbanes-Oxley (SarbOx) Act and Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) requirements.
OUR DESIGN

OUR DESIGN
The user interface for investigating suspicious emails (this is needed to comply with the Sarbanes-Oxley Act).

OUR DESIGN
The UI for reviewing a specific quarantined message.

OUR DESIGN
The UI design for editing a policy.

OUR DESIGN
The user experience for reviewing your quarantined mail messages if you're an administrator.

CONCEPT #1
An alternate visual design mockup. Notice the different icon style from the production screens you see above. But at least it's not green!

CONCEPT #2
Another alternate visual design mockup. They said that they like green. And blue.

CONCEPT #3
Another alternate visual design mockup. Can you tell the client liked curves?

CONCEPT #4
Another alternate visual design mockup. This reflected the branding of their website. No curves. No green either.

CONCEPT #5
Another alternate visual design mockup. Notice the work area is recessed into the frame.

CONCEPT #6
Another alternate visual design mockup. Which visual style would you choose?

CONCEPT #7
Another alternate visual design mockup. When you look at the vast body of work and number of visual selections, this project looks like a bargain!

CONCEPT #8
Another alternate visual design mockup. Can you see the old iMac and iPod influence? Remember when all of those consumer products were made of transparent plastic? Still beats green, though.

CONCEPT #9
Another alternate visual design mockup. Is there more to say? Whew!