Hi Ana. I can try and give you feedback from a designer's perspective.
I absolutely love the idea behind Weekplan. I think is one of the best solutions I've heard on managing time effectively and it is definitely different from the bunch of other promises of organizing your day that are really just time trackers. This is by far the best option in concept and tools. Having a prioritization matrix sounds great, I'm a fan of this system and having it integrated within my task planner is great. Also, the roles side of the app and the parking lot to free your mind from later tasks, big hits.
Now, notice how I always said "sounds good". It doesn't "look good". Weekplan's UI is cluttered and confusing. There is A LOT going on at the same time. Several options dispersed throughout the screen, super small buttons and a variety of call to actions. You don't seem to have a Visual Design Language. What you see is feature within feature within feature. Which can be great when you are the master of organization, but probably your users found you looking for something that helps them in that aspect because they are not o great at it.
Moving on. For the tasks (your core feature) There's no clear differentiation between Urgent tasks from important tasks from unimportant tasks apart from urgent ones being red stroked. But that doesn't stand out much.
I just spent 40 minutes in the app maybe and I knew I wouldn't be able to achieve the "Use WeekPlan for at least a week" pre-installed task.
And all of this I identified with just a couple of tasks created from Google calendar and three tasks created inside of the app. I wouldn't want to imagine if I had a cluttered calendar the first time I integrate it with Weekplan. It would be an instant turn off.
Keep in mind that your users are people looking for help in ordering. Prioritizing, organizing, plan and executing tasks. So Weekplan should be rather "invisible", but with this interface you are pretty much contributing to their chaos and forcing them to spend their entire attention in organizing their mess with a hard to use tool.
You have here a very good idea in functionality terms, but not so well executed in design terms. You are using advanced techniques for efficiency, which is great, don't get me wrong, but when the concept is so dense your solution has to be equally proportioned in the opposite way.
Hope this quick feedback is valuable and I look forward to seeing improvement in your design system. I love designing apps, and if your team needs some extra hands on this aspect please don't hesitate on contacting me.
I'd be happy to help
Keep it up!
Rafael, I am the founder.
This is awesome feedback. I am the one behind this inconsistent design and I know I have failed at this job.
Can I pay you so that you can draft the UI the way you think it should be?
Hi Ana. I can try and give you feedback from a designer's perspective.
I absolutely love the idea behind Weekplan. I think is one of the best solutions I've heard on managing time effectively and it is definitely different from the bunch of other promises of organizing your day that are really just time trackers. This is by far the best option in concept and tools. Having a prioritization matrix sounds great, I'm a fan of this system and having it integrated within my task planner is great. Also, the roles side of the app and the parking lot to free your mind from later tasks, big hits.
Now, notice how I always said "sounds good". It doesn't "look good". Weekplan's UI is cluttered and confusing. There is A LOT going on at the same time. Several options dispersed throughout the screen, super small buttons and a variety of call to actions. You don't seem to have a Visual Design Language. What you see is feature within feature within feature. Which can be great when you are the master of organization, but probably your users found you looking for something that helps them in that aspect because they are not o great at it.
Moving on. For the tasks (your core feature) There's no clear differentiation between Urgent tasks from important tasks from unimportant tasks apart from urgent ones being red stroked. But that doesn't stand out much.
I just spent 40 minutes in the app maybe and I knew I wouldn't be able to achieve the "Use WeekPlan for at least a week" pre-installed task.
And all of this I identified with just a couple of tasks created from Google calendar and three tasks created inside of the app. I wouldn't want to imagine if I had a cluttered calendar the first time I integrate it with Weekplan. It would be an instant turn off.
Keep in mind that your users are people looking for help in ordering. Prioritizing, organizing, plan and executing tasks. So Weekplan should be rather "invisible", but with this interface you are pretty much contributing to their chaos and forcing them to spend their entire attention in organizing their mess with a hard to use tool.
You have here a very good idea in functionality terms, but not so well executed in design terms. You are using advanced techniques for efficiency, which is great, don't get me wrong, but when the concept is so dense your solution has to be equally proportioned in the opposite way.
Hope this quick feedback is valuable and I look forward to seeing improvement in your design system. I love designing apps, and if your team needs some extra hands on this aspect please don't hesitate on contacting me.
I'd be happy to help
Keep it up!
Hi there!
We are sorry to hear that you don't like the app.
May we know the reason why? Your feedback will help us with improving the app.
Rafael, I am the founder.
This is awesome feedback. I am the one behind this inconsistent design and I know I have failed at this job.
Can I pay you so that you can draft the UI the way you think it should be?
The earlier the better so that your impressions are still fresh/