Building a new home, and new branding for the Chrome Web Platform team to meet web developers through canonical resources for modern web development — web.dev in 3 months
Motivations
The Web Developer Relations team on Chrome had a vision to build a new home to distribute canonical recommendations on web development for web developers, e.g. web.dev/pwa and web.dev/secure (vs bit.ly/secure).
Also, the team needed to migrate necessary content resources from its original home developers.google.com/web to the home under a newly thought-out navigation structure.
The long-term vision of the project was to develop it beyond the written content site and turn it into a home with a learning platform and integrated personalized tools.
What
The team shared the short-term goal to deliver the first version, Beta, with the most essential parts in the 3 month time frame targeting to launch it at the Chrome Developer Summit 2018.
Joining the multi disciplinary forces together — Product, Engineering, Developer Relations, Tech Writing, Marking, UX Research, UX Design, and Design Agency Partner — the team immediately embraced the user centered design process.
The team kicked off the project with the design sprint to define the target user, to identify the primary use cases, i.e. fix a specific problem and also dive deep into a topic, and to enumerate ideas.
The team vetted the early ideas through developer feedback, and fleshed out details. When possible, the sub groups ran parallel to one another implementing the functionalities and deciding on branding direction while tuning into user studies on the prototypes.
The beta version was shipped on schedule at the summit.
Now, web.dev is the home for ever growing developer users to learn the canonical concepts, e.g. Learn CSS, and the latest web platform changes, e.g. new APIs and layout engine. web.dev also hosted its first-ever online conference, web.dev/live in June 2019 when Covid-19 hit.
My contributions
I led the design development of the Beta product, introducing & driving the design process, running the design sprint, and designing the navigation structure and the detail UIs. I partnered with the UX Researcher, the design agency and the Google Brand Studio, and drove the resolutions on the design direction and on the details. I reviewed the implemented product, and worked with the team to finesse.
Read more about what the product co-lead shared about the design process and my contribution.
Post-beta, I onboarded and guided a designer to manage the design development, the design system expansion, and the product/service additions onward.