Year

2020

Project

Volo Airline App

Role

UI Designer

UX Writer

Volo is an Airline App* for domestic flights inside the US.

* Fictitious airline companies’ conditions apply.

Volo Airline App​

Scenario

A traveller is at an airport, waiting for the last leg of a flight home when their flight gets abruptly cancelled due to bad weather.

Challenge

Write a message from the airline app, notifying them of the cancellation and what they need to do next.
Design the screens where this message will be accessed and read.

The airline has the responsability to provide the information and the solutions the customer needs, in order to allow them to make informed decisions.

Volo Airline App​

User Context

Who is the user?

Domestic flights in the US are a much easier way to travel across the country than by road, due to its dimension.
When a disruption happens on a flight leg, the customer could be a thousand miles away from home, what creates a stressful situation.

Volo Airline App

Problems to solve

Focusing on the domestic flight travellers, the app challenge was trying to solve 3 problems:

Reassure the Customer

The airline should inform the customer without causing them any distress.

Offer Options to solve the problem

List the options and offer support so the customer can make their own decisions.

Be Human and offer Support

The airline should seek to provide human contact, so it can be more helpful and create a relationship with the customer.

Volo Airline App

UX Approach

01 Color

The logo and interface were designed using soothing natural tones in dark and light schemes- designed inspired on the sky and the greenery the customers can see from the sky.
The alarm colour code uses sunset colours, something also common for travellers. It is different enough from the main palette to alert for changes, but not too red-ish to provoke restlessness.

02 Front and Center

The message is displayed on the screen centre, so it doesn't go unnoticed, with a contrasting background for better legibility.

03 Personalize the contact

When open, the communication tone in the message is empathetic, clear and informational and offers support. The interface offers straightforward options to enraged clients - that even hurts the company interests - but, on a secondary level, offers more reasonable options to actually solve the problem.
This has a psychological effect on the customer, that aims at diluting anger progressively.

Home screens of Airline App showing notifications in light and dark schemes/ Notifications and offering support
Volo Airline App

Ideation & Testing

This was an exercise in UX Writing and Interface design, so it was never meant to be tested.
Anyhow, if it was to be tested, some of the methods I would use to test both the messaging and the app usability to this specific key take would be:

  • Immersion test – based on storytelling techniques to set the mood for the user to feel they belong to the scenario would provide an immersion environment where relaxed and in-the-zone the user could react instinctively to the situation and the messaging. This could be complemented with video footage of the test.
  • Impression test – to check for gut reactions to the scenario and how the prototype would provide a solution to the question at hand.
  • User surveys – after being subject to these two methods, and considering the objective is to understand how to give bad upsetting news to regular customers, I think Volo would take some key learnings from these methods.
  • Other methods could be applied, but my proposal is to check reactions to the way we can message better.
Volo Airline App

Conclusions

This challenge was a good example of how much importance UX Writing has, especially in fields where the customer is heavily impacted.

An interesting challenge, following this one, is to design and map the whole app, especially on what UX Writing concerns.