How We Work: UX

A content-first approach to product clarity, usability, and delivery

UX work slows down when content shows up too late.

Design decisions are already locked. Flows are built on assumptions. Rework becomes inevitable.

Our work with UX and product teams follows Content-First Design, a practice that brings content and meaning into the process early so structure, flow, and interaction are grounded in real user needs.

How do UX engagements unfold?

UX work follows a clear progression rooted in the content-first double diamond.

Each stage exists for a reason. Skipping steps is how teams end up redesigning the same things twice.

1. Discover

We understand the user conversation before design begins

We start by understanding what users need to know, decide, and do.

This includes examining existing content, user journeys, stakeholder inputs, and research to surface gaps, assumptions, and risks. Content is treated as a primary signal, not an afterthought.

What this produces

2. Define

We clarify the problem and the constraints

Discovery surfaces information. Definition turns it into direction.

In this stage, we align on problem statements, priorities, and design principles. Teams agree on what success looks like and what constraints must guide the work.

This is where ambiguity is reduced before design accelerates.

What this produces

3. Develop

We design with content leading the way

Only after problems and constraints are clear do we move into development.

Content is used to inform structure, flow, and interaction. Prototypes are grounded in real language, not placeholders, so teams can evaluate meaning as well as usability.

This is where content-first design changes how decisions are made.

What this produces

4. Deliver

We test, refine, and support real use

Delivery is where assumptions meet reality.

We support testing, iteration, and rollout to ensure the experience holds up under real conditions. Accessibility, clarity, and usability are evaluated to

The focus is on learning without reopening foundational decisions.

What this produces

What can UX and product teams expect?

Artifacts are tailored to each engagement, but commonly include:

These artifacts are designed to:

We don’t optimize for artifacts.

We optimize for decisions teams can reuse.

What is it like to work together?

We work as partners inside the product team.

You can expect clear goals, direct feedback, and close collaboration with designers, product managers, and content practitioners. We don’t operate as a downstream service or a one-off reviewer.

The strongest signal of success is when teams start making content-led design decisions without needing to escalate them.

When is this approach the right fit?

Our UX work is best suited for teams who:

This approach is based on the process outlined in Content-First Design, published by XML Press, 2025, and adapted for real product teams working under real constraints.

What is the next step

If content is arriving too late in your design process, this is where to start.