As the platform expanded, users faced increasing friction when navigating key tasks. Many flows still reflected early stage decisions, and new features were layered on top of old layouts without a unified strategy. This created inconsistencies that affected onboarding, task completion and general user confidence.
To address these challenges, a broad effort was launched to reorganize critical journeys, simplify decision points and ensure the interface supported clarity rather than adding cognitive load. The goal was to set a new foundation for future feature development while improving immediate usability.
‘The product needed to grow without becoming heavier. Our focus was making complexity feel simple, not invisible.’
After mapping the full experience, the team focused on the areas with the highest impact on daily usage. This allowed us to prioritize quick wins while working on deeper structural improvements in parallel.
Understanding the Experience
Revealing the reasons behind user friction by analyzing behaviors, patterns and decision points.

Research showed that while users understood the platform conceptually, the interface did not reflect their mental models. Navigation was inconsistent in naming and placement, and several core tasks required unnecessary back and forth. These findings shaped the redesign strategy.
To maintain alignment with business needs, we also mapped cross team dependencies and technical constraints. This prevented rework and made the project a shared initiative rather than an isolated UX improvement.
Shaping the Solution
The solution required balancing structural adjustments with pragmatic improvements to ensure the new experience felt coherent without disrupting ongoing development.
After consolidating insights and patterns, the team created a modular structure that allowed features to scale while remaining intuitive. Components were reorganized, labels were simplified and task flows were reduced to fewer steps.
Visual hierarchy was strengthened to guide attention and reduce confusion. Prototypes were tested iteratively, and refinements improved success rates and reduced hesitation during key actions.
- Eles deveriam ter tamanhos distintos
- Eles deveriam parecer subníveis uns dos outros
- Talvez o espaçamento entre linhas também ajude na separação
- Mais um elemento para verificar isso
- O quinto dos elementos
Improving Clarity by Mapping Real User Behaviors Across Key Journeys
Users often completed tasks in ways that the interface did not anticipate. By analyzing how they navigated real scenarios, the team identified gaps that limited efficiency and confidence.
What Users Expected
- Clear pathways with predictable decision points
- Labels that matched their mental models
- Consistent feedback when actions were completed
What the Product Delivered
- Varying patterns that caused unnecessary hesitation
- Terminology that changed across different sections
- Limited confirmation for high impact actions
Já este é um título de terceiro nível (só não parece)
Você consegue perceber diferença entre eles? Contudo, há ainda pontos que nos explicam onde pode ter dado errado:
Olha, outro link aqui! A diferença é que dessa vez estamos tratando de algo que contém um link enorme que com certeza ultrapassará a linha e pegará diversas linhas.

Este é um subtítulo
Uma frase de impacto para abordar melhor
Final refinements focused on interaction polish, clearer feedback states and documentation to help teams maintain consistency over time.
Through research, design and collaboration, Project Atlas delivered an experience that is more predictable, simpler to navigate and better aligned with user needs. It also established a flexible foundation for future product growth.
