WSP Unified Site
Art Direction, User Research, Wire-framing, and Web Design.
The Brief:
Workday Success Plans (WSP) is a sub-product within the broader Workday ecosystem. Over time, the offering has expanded its services, business model, and organizational structure. However, this rapid growth created challenges in onboarding new team members and aligning resources, goals, and enablement materials.
To address these issues, a unified site was proposed to centralize product knowledge, enablement resources, process documentation, news, onboarding materials, and broader team initiatives.
Table of Contents
Challenge & Solution
Challenge: As Workday Success Plans rapidly expanded, knowledge, processes, and enablement resources became fragmented across multiple channels. This created friction in onboarding new team members and made it difficult to align teams with consistent goals, content, and processes.
The challenge was to design a unified platform that could centralize a wide array of content types while remaining scalable and easy to navigate.
Solution: In my role, I led art direction, user research, wire-framing, content design, and web design to develop a centralized site. By identifying user pain points and mapping content needs, I created a streamlined information architecture and clean visual framework.
The final design consolidated product knowledge, process documentation, onboarding materials, and team initiatives into one accessible, cohesive hub—improving both onboarding efficiency and organizational alignment.
The final design consolidated product knowledge, process documentation, onboarding materials, and team initiatives into one accessible, cohesive hub—improving both onboarding efficiency and organizational alignment.
Research Insights
To understand how teams were currently accessing Workday Success Plans resources, I conducted stakeholder interviews, user surveys, and content audits. The research revealed three recurring pain points:
From this research, it became clear that users needed a single, authoritative source of truth that could scale as the business grew. These findings directly informed the site’s information architecture, content strategy, and design priorities, ensuring that usability and clarity stayed at the core of the solution.
Design Approach
To bring clarity and scalability, I created a structured site map anchored by a Home Page with five main sections: News, Enablement, Processes, Onboarding, and Initiatives.
Each section contained subcategories tailored to user needs. For example, Enablement covered feature adoption, deliverables, and webinars, while Processes documented staffing, release planning, and methodologies. I also built in flexible “sub-article” pages that could fit under multiple categories, ensuring the system could grow with the organization. This structure balanced immediate usability with long-term scalability.
Wire-framing
Wireframes were designed to prioritize long-form readability while integrating contextual links and resource modules, ensuring users can stay focused on content while easily accessing supporting Workday Success Plan materials.There were five main goals of the wireframes:
- Focus on long-form readability
- Content hierarchy
- Support of contextual links and resource modules
- Seamless organization of supporting materials
- Balanced depth and accessibility
Discovery: Balancing Density and Usability
In discovery, I quickly realized one of the biggest pain points: sections like Processes and Enablement were overflowing with long, detailed documentation. Users felt buried in information and struggled to find what they needed. The conflict was clear—too much detail made the site unusable.
The resolution came with collapsible groups, which gave users a way to scan at a glance and expand only when they wanted the detail. This small shift turned overwhelming pages into a clear, navigable experience.
The resolution came with collapsible groups, which gave users a way to scan at a glance and expand only when they wanted the detail. This small shift turned overwhelming pages into a clear, navigable experience.
They were able to achieve these goals:
- Manage content density
- Reduce visual clutter
- Support different user needs
- Scalable structure
Topic Article Pages and News Pages
Organized related content into clear groupings, helping users understand the breadth of resources available under a given theme.
Consistent navigation patterns ensured users could move between topics without losing their sense of place.
Collapsible groups allowed users to scan broadly, then dive deeper when needed.
FAQ Page
Quick access to common questions with clear grouping by topic to reduce user frustration.
Expandable/collapsible answers to allow users to scan questions quickly and reveal details only when needed.
Cross-linking to related resources so users can dive deeper if they need more context.
processes evolve.
Mobile View
The mobile view follows the same core design goals, with only a few adaptations made to improve the experience.The changes that were modified for mobile use were:
or sticky header.