User Experience Design.

Case Study: Card Anatomy System for Requisition Item Selection

Completed while working as a UX Designer at Infor

Overview:

I designed a reusable card anatomy framework to clarify how information is prioritized and displayed when users add items to requisitions. The goal was to reduce cognitive load and decision errors by clearly separating decision-critical signals from contextual and operational details.

This case study demonstrates how a tiered information model—paired with explicit visual hierarchy rules—can scale across complex item states (e.g., recall, non-stock, kits, substitutes) while remaining scannable, accessible, and implementation-ready. The outcome is a shared system that helps design and development teams make consistent decisions without re-debating layout on every card.

EDI Workspace Dashboard

Completed while working as a UX Designer at Infor

Overview:

In an effort to streamline and improve the efficiency of supply chain purchases, I developed an EDI Administrative Workspace that enhances how electronic data is exchanged between our company and its suppliers. The goal was to accelerate the purchasing process by creating a workspace where EDI errors, transactions, and vendor volume data could be easily monitored and addressed, thus reducing the time spent manually processing and reviewing supplier files.

Web Application Icon Uplift

Completed while working as a UX Designer at Infor

Overview:

In my role as a UX designer, I was tasked with creating key design assets for the financial and supply chain modules of our ERP software. These assets were aimed at enhancing user interaction, improving efficiency, and making complex processes easier to navigate for users across the financial and supply chain sectors.

Asks & Gives Tool

Client: Plant Chicago

Project Brief: Create a way to facilitate the non-monetary exchange of materials and skills between business owners who participate in Plant Chicago’s Circular Economy Leaders Network (CELN).