A powerful, simple way for healthcare professionals to organize and share their credentials.
A healthcare entrepreneur came to me with an idea to simplify the sharing of medical credentials. My role on the project was to organize the information architecture of the product and design the screens needed to build it.
Healthcare workers require many types of credentials to do their work. They find it difficult to organize all of this paperwork, share it with hospitals and keep certifications from expiring.
To solve these pain points, my client wanted to make a centralized repository of healthcare credentials in a mobile app. The user needed to be able to upload their credentials and export them to anyone who requested them.
Medentials is an MVP that prioritized a quick build. To do this, I needed to build the brand quickly, so I customized a design system:
I also created a unique logo for the product, rendered from scratch in Figma.
I created card components for the “choose a speciality” feature, drop zones, lists, tiles with illustrations and notifications.
I found an illustration pack on the Figma community site and used different pieces to create the illustrations in the app.
Healthcare specializations have hundreds of specialties and sub specialties. I organized each category into a hierarchy so that the engineer on the project knew how the UI components related to the content.
There are three main user flows in Medentials.
First, users need to choose their medical speciality and sub specialty.
Second, they need to upload the credentials relevant to their work.
Finally, they need to export these credentials to an employer.
Medentials had a complicated taxonomy. I experimented with assigning icons to each category and sub category. It worked, but it was not right for an MVP build. Execution would have taken too much time, so I scaled back and didn’t use icons.
Medentials is expected to deploy on the App Store mid to late 2023.