Screen from a fictional website on a purple gradient background

Mercury

PRODUCT DESIGN

VMWARE

Overview

As a product designer and consultant at VMware's Tanzu Labs, I worked on the Mercury project, a logistics application for the US Army via the Army Software Factory. Our goal was to create a user-friendly interface to track personnel, manage inventory, and enable communication among logisticians. Our team tackled the challenges presented by the legacy Army logistics app, OPLOG Planner, and embraced Lean and Agile methodologies to design an intuitive UI.

Problem

For this project, we worked on a logistics application called Mercury that helps the Army manage its logistics needs. The goal of the project was to create a user-friendly interface that would make it easy for users to track personnel and equipment, manage inventory, and communicate with other logisticians. The image above is a screenshot of the legacy Army logistics application, OPLOG Planner (above), which Soldiers have trouble accessing and using (yes, that is Comic Sans button styling).

Solution

Based on this research, we designed a web app that features a clean and modern interface that brings value to the users. The app includes an easy flow for Logisticians to create a plan, add their units, edit equipment, and view their estimate. We also incorporated a Share functionality, so that Logisticians can easily share their plans with other Soldiers to get more visibility and feedback to make more accurate estimations.

Design Process

Research

To inform our design decisions, we conducted both user and market research with logistics soldiers by interviewing them on base.

User Personas

After doing our research, we created a persona of Major Paul Polstner, the Brigade Special Projects Officer who would be our primary user.

Wireframing

Using the insights from our research, we began sketching and ideating potential design solutions.

Design Mockups

One key design decision we made was to include a customizable dashboard on the app's home screen that would allow users to see a summary of their Classes of Supply, inventory, and being able to communicate with other Soldiers who need to know what is needed for this mission.

Prototyping and Testing

Using Figma, we created high-fidelity mockups of the app's key screens and features. We tested these designs with Army logisticians and Brigade SPOs to gather feedback and identify areas for improvement.

Results

The product's MVP was well received by Army Logisticians Brigade SPO personnel. The next steps were to develop in-app sharing, adding additional coding like Unit Identification Codes (UICS), advancing the class of supply estimates, and making it available to SIPR. For my contributions, I received a certificate of appreciation upon departing the project.

Press Links

Modernization In Action: How These 3 Organizations Transformed For The Future by Forbes

Is The Future Of The Battlefield Soldiers As Real Time Software Coders? by Forbes

Coding for the future of U.S. national defense by Broadcom

Army undersecretary on A.I.’s role in the future of the military by CNBC

DoD Software Factories Take Charge of Their Digital Destinies by The New Stack

Screen from a fictional website on a purple gradient background

Mercury

PRODUCT DESIGN

VMWARE

Overview

As a product designer and consultant at VMware's Tanzu Labs, I worked on the Mercury project, a logistics application for the US Army via the Army Software Factory. Our goal was to create a user-friendly interface to track personnel, manage inventory, and enable communication among logisticians. Our team tackled the challenges presented by the legacy Army logistics app, OPLOG Planner, and embraced Lean and Agile methodologies to design an intuitive UI.

Problem

For this project, we worked on a logistics application called Mercury that helps the Army manage its logistics needs. The goal of the project was to create a user-friendly interface that would make it easy for users to track personnel and equipment, manage inventory, and communicate with other logisticians. The image above is a screenshot of the legacy Army logistics application, OPLOG Planner (above), which Soldiers have trouble accessing and using (yes, that is Comic Sans button styling).

Solution

Based on this research, we designed a web app that features a clean and modern interface that brings value to the users. The app includes an easy flow for Logisticians to create a plan, add their units, edit equipment, and view their estimate. We also incorporated a Share functionality, so that Logisticians can easily share their plans with other Soldiers to get more visibility and feedback to make more accurate estimations.

Design Process

Research

To inform our design decisions, we conducted both user and market research with logistics soldiers by interviewing them on base.

User Personas

After doing our research, we created a persona of Major Paul Polstner, the Brigade Special Projects Officer who would be our primary user.

Wireframing

Using the insights from our research, we began sketching and ideating potential design solutions.

Design Mockups

One key design decision we made was to include a customizable dashboard on the app's home screen that would allow users to see a summary of their Classes of Supply, inventory, and being able to communicate with other Soldiers who need to know what is needed for this mission.

Prototyping and Testing

Using Figma, we created high-fidelity mockups of the app's key screens and features. We tested these designs with Army logisticians and Brigade SPOs to gather feedback and identify areas for improvement.

Results

The product's MVP was well received by Army Logisticians Brigade SPO personnel. The next steps were to develop in-app sharing, adding additional coding like Unit Identification Codes (UICS), advancing the class of supply estimates, and making it available to SIPR. For my contributions, I received a certificate of appreciation upon departing the project.

Press Links

Modernization In Action: How These 3 Organizations Transformed For The Future by Forbes

Is The Future Of The Battlefield Soldiers As Real Time Software Coders? by Forbes

Coding for the future of U.S. national defense by Broadcom

Army undersecretary on A.I.’s role in the future of the military by CNBC

DoD Software Factories Take Charge of Their Digital Destinies by The New Stack

Screen from a fictional website on a purple gradient background

Mercury

PRODUCT DESIGN

VMWARE

Overview

As a product designer and consultant at VMware's Tanzu Labs, I worked on the Mercury project, a logistics application for the US Army via the Army Software Factory. Our goal was to create a user-friendly interface to track personnel, manage inventory, and enable communication among logisticians. Our team tackled the challenges presented by the legacy Army logistics app, OPLOG Planner, and embraced Lean and Agile methodologies to design an intuitive UI.

Problem

For this project, we worked on a logistics application called Mercury that helps the Army manage its logistics needs. The goal of the project was to create a user-friendly interface that would make it easy for users to track personnel and equipment, manage inventory, and communicate with other logisticians. The image above is a screenshot of the legacy Army logistics application, OPLOG Planner (above), which Soldiers have trouble accessing and using (yes, that is Comic Sans button styling).

Solution

Based on this research, we designed a web app that features a clean and modern interface that brings value to the users. The app includes an easy flow for Logisticians to create a plan, add their units, edit equipment, and view their estimate. We also incorporated a Share functionality, so that Logisticians can easily share their plans with other Soldiers to get more visibility and feedback to make more accurate estimations.

Design Process

Research

To inform our design decisions, we conducted both user and market research with logistics soldiers by interviewing them on base.

User Personas

After doing our research, we created a persona of Major Paul Polstner, the Brigade Special Projects Officer who would be our primary user.

Wireframing

Using the insights from our research, we began sketching and ideating potential design solutions.

Design Mockups

One key design decision we made was to include a customizable dashboard on the app's home screen that would allow users to see a summary of their Classes of Supply, inventory, and being able to communicate with other Soldiers who need to know what is needed for this mission.

Prototyping and Testing

Using Figma, we created high-fidelity mockups of the app's key screens and features. We tested these designs with Army logisticians and Brigade SPOs to gather feedback and identify areas for improvement.

Results

The product's MVP was well received by Army Logisticians Brigade SPO personnel. The next steps were to develop in-app sharing, adding additional coding like Unit Identification Codes (UICS), advancing the class of supply estimates, and making it available to SIPR. For my contributions, I received a certificate of appreciation upon departing the project.

Press Links

Modernization In Action: How These 3 Organizations Transformed For The Future by Forbes

Is The Future Of The Battlefield Soldiers As Real Time Software Coders? by Forbes

Coding for the future of U.S. national defense by Broadcom

Army undersecretary on A.I.’s role in the future of the military by CNBC

DoD Software Factories Take Charge of Their Digital Destinies by The New Stack