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sam henri gold

Here's just a standard empty state. The description text is leading aligned, but the image and button are both centered. Easy fix: center the stack, center align the description text, reduce the prominence of the CTA.

a side-by-side comparison of the current vs a proposed empty state. the current has an illustration centered, leading aligned text, and a prominent full-width block button. The proposed design:
- centers everything,
- reduces the copy down from "Looks like you don't have any financial accounts right now.” to “No financial accounts”, and
- reduces the prominence of the button to be red on a faint red color.
8 comments
sam henri gold replied to sam henri gold

If you've used SwiftUI, you'll be familiar semantic toolbar item placements. destructiveAction, navigation, etc. These exist because we've been conditioned to expect certain button types in certain positions. So imagine my surprise when I saw Log out in the confirmation position

Settings sheet. In the nav bar, from left to right: “Close”, “Log out”

List options:
Security settings
Login settings
Communication settings
Document Center (Billing, payment and policy docs)
Contact us
Help topics
About the app
sam henri gold replied to sam henri gold

Make log out a destructive bottom, position it to the bottom of the list, rename "Close" to "Done" and put it in the confirmation position. Boom, fixed your nav bar.

The same settings screen but with the updated nav bar and Log out as the final list option.
sam henri gold replied to sam henri gold

There are a few screens where navigation titles compete with some arbitrary heading in the view. Avoid having two headers of the same visual prominence right next to each other.

Navigation title: “Programs and services”
Same heading level: “We’ve got you covered”

and the rest is just blah blah text
sam henri gold replied to sam henri gold

Okay. I've done enough free work for State Farm Insurance Inc. The point of this being: these are all papercuts. Nothing fundemental. Just little things that worsen the experience. Take some time to audit your project for these things. I promise you'll be better off because of it

sam henri gold replied to sam henri gold

btw, Lickability (where I normally write these threads) did not endorse this or anything, this is literally just me kvetching about an app that has been forced into my life.

more design threads are planned for @lickability as well as here!

Jeff C. 🇺🇦 replied to sam henri gold

@samhenrigold @lickability If you want to be angry about animation I suggest giving the Panera iOS app a look.

Ordering something is like walking through tar.

Timo Hetzel replied to sam henri gold

@samhenrigold I just signed up for the umpteenth EV charging plan. App asked me three times for phone number and address, sabotaging autofill of course. Anything car related seems to be bottom of the barrel.

Paul McAleer replied to sam henri gold

@samhenrigold I appreciate seeing a nice critique. This all, to me, felt like a classic "we have 5 teams working on this app but no single person driving the overall UX or CX but we delivered software" situation. What happens when no one looks at the whole thing? Mostly this.

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