A long-term prototyping and visual design project for Siemens Healthcare.
Our client, a manufacturer of medical X-Ray machines, came to us with the ask to help design a new radiology workflow and a set of interfaces for their new product line with touch screen technology.
This meant that the X-Ray workflow had to be as easy-to-learn as possible but include a lot of functionality. Our goals were to create a product that offered time-efficient high quality outputs, but also featured quick-to-learn, intuitive operation and standardized workflows.
With our brief from the client, we received the requirements for the project together with internal user research outcome, which documented, how the X-Ray devices are currently used by radiologists, their pain points, as well as the CI documentation.
Together with our client, we divided the application into several parts, and focused on each part separately.
First, together with my project manager, I created the overall flow of the X-Ray taking into account pre-exisiting requirements and procedures. Based on this flow, we created a set of wireframes and visual design proposals.
After several iterations, when the flow was set, we focused on visual designs for one of the pre-selected devices.
At the end, we decided to separate the navigation and the functionality of each step, and keep them on the left and right sides of the X-Ray image.
The visual design was