Skip to main content

Over the past few years, our design team has been exploring ways to make UI/UX design more human-centered yet scalable — especially when working across multiple industries and time zones.

At Lollypop Design, we rely heavily on Figma for real-time collaboration, user research mapping, and prototype testing.
Here’s a quick overview of how our process evolved:

1. Research to Wireframes

We start every project with empathy mapping and data-backed insights.
Figma’s FigJam helps us visualize pain points, then translate those into user flows and low-fidelity wireframes.
 

 2. Design Systems for Consistency

Using shared design systems in Figma allows our team to maintain visual and interaction consistency across projects.
We build reusable components and styles that developers can easily understand — cutting down iteration time by almost 30%.

3. Collaborative Testing & Iteration

Our clients are part of the Figma workspace, so they can leave contextual feedback directly on prototypes.
This creates faster validation cycles and keeps everyone aligned.

 4. Bridging Design with Business Outcomes

We’ve learned that strong UI/UX design isn’t just aesthetic — it directly impacts business KPIs.
Our Figma-based design sprints helped several brands increase conversion rates through improved onboarding and better information hierarchy.

Would love to hear from the community —
👉 How do you manage scalability and consistency in large Figma projects?
👉 Any best practices for keeping design systems efficient as teams grow?

Be the first to reply!