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Sunday, July 13, 2025

Design System In 90 Days

 

Helpful PDF worksheets and tools to get the design system effort up and running — and adopted! Kindly powered by How To Measure UX and Design Impact, a friendly course on how to show the impact of your incredible UX work on business.

So we want to set up a new design system for your product. How do we get it up and running from scratch? Do we start with key stakeholders, UI audits, or naming conventions? And what are some of the critical conversations we need to have early to avoid problems down the line?

Fortunately, there are a few useful little helpers to get started — and they are the ones I tend to rely on quite a bit when initiating any design system projects.

Design System In 90 Days Canvas

Design System in 90 Days Canvas (FigJam template) is a handy set of useful questions to start a design system effort. Essentially, it’s a roadmap to discuss everything from the value of a design system to stakeholders, teams involved, and components to start with.

tle helper to get a design system up and running — and adopted! — in 90 days. Created for small and large companies that are building a design system or plan to set up one. Kindly shared by Dan Mall.

Practical Design System Tactics

Design System Tactics is a practical overview of tactics to help designers make progress with a design system at every stage — from crafting system principles to component discovery to design system office hours to cross-brand consolidation. Wonderful work by the one-and-only Ness Grixti.

An overview of practical design system tactics displayed as cards
Design System Tactics, a practical overview by Ness Grixti.

Design System Worksheet (PDF)

Design System Checklist by Nathan Curtis (download the PDF) is a practical 2-page worksheet for a 60-minute team activity, designed to choose the right parts, products, and people for your design system.


Of course, the point of a design system is not to be fully comprehensive or cover every possible component you might ever need. It’s all about being useful enough to help designers produce quality work faster and being flexible enough to help designers make decisions rather than make decisions for them.

Useful Questions To Get Started With

The value of a design system lies in it being useful and applicable — for a large group of people in the organization. And according to Dan, a good start is to identify where exactly that value would be most helpful to tackle the company’s critical challenges and goals:

  1. What is important to our organization at the highest level?
  2. Who is important to our design system effort?
  3. What unofficial systems already exist in design and code?
  4. Which teams have upcoming needs that a system could solve?
  5. Which teams have immediate needs that can grow our system?
  6. Which teams should we and have we talked to?
  7. Which stakeholders should we and have we talked to?
  8. What needs, desires, and concerns do our stakeholders have?
  9. What components do product or feature teams need now or soon?
  10. What end-user problems/opportunities could a system address?
  11. What did we learn about using other design systems?
  12. What is our repeatable process for working on products?
  13. What components will we start with?
  14. What needs, desires, and concerns do our stakeholders share?
  15. Where are our components currently being used or planned for?

Useful Resources

Here are a few other useful little helpers that might help you in your design system efforts:

Wrapping Up

A canvas often acts as a great conversation starter. It’s rarely complete, but it brings up topics and issues that one wouldn’t have discovered on the spot. We won’t have answers to all questions right away, but we can start moving in the right direction to turn a design system effort into a success.

Happy crossing off the right tick boxes!

Building A Practical UX Strategy Framework

 

In my experience, most UX teams find themselves primarily implementing other people’s ideas rather than leading the conversation about user experience. This happens because stakeholders and decision-makers often lack a deep understanding of UX’s capabilities and potential. Without a clear UX strategy framework, professionals get relegated to a purely tactical role — wireframing and testing solutions conceived by others.

A well-crafted UX strategy framework changes this dynamic. It helps UX teams take control of their role and demonstrate real leadership in improving the user experience. Rather than just responding to requests, you can proactively identify opportunities that deliver genuine business value. A strategic approach also helps educate stakeholders about UX’s full potential while building credibility through measurable results.

Strategy And The Fat Smoker

When I guide teams on creating a UX strategy, I like to keep things simple. I borrow an approach from the book Strategy and the Fat Smoker and break strategy into three clear parts:

  1. First, we diagnose where we are today.
  2. Then, we set guiding policies to steer us.
  3. Finally, we outline actions to get us where we want to go.

Let me walk you through each part so you can shape a UX strategy that feels both practical and powerful.

Diagnosis: Know Your Starting Point

Before we outline any plan, we need to assess our current situation. A clear diagnosis shows where you can make the biggest impact. It also highlights the gaps you must fill.

Identify Status Quo Failures

Start by naming what isn’t working. You might find that your organization lacks a UX team. Or the team has a budget that is too small. Sometimes you uncover that user satisfaction scores are slipping. Frame these challenges in business terms. For example, a slow sign‑up flow may be costing you 20 percent of new registrations each month. That ties UX to revenue and grabs attention.

Once you have a list of failures, ask yourself:

What outcome does each failure hurt?

A slow checkout might reduce e‑commerce sales. Complicated navigation may dent customer retention. Linking UX issues to business metrics makes the case for change.

Map The Aspirational Experience #

Next, visualize what an improved journey would look like. A quick way is to create two simple journey maps. One shows the current experience. The other shows an ideal path. Highlight key steps like discovery, sign‑up, onboarding, and support. Then ask:

How will this new journey help meet our business goals?

Maybe faster onboarding can cut support costs. Or a streamlined checkout can boost average order value.

Let me share a real-world example. When working with the Samaritans, a UK mental health charity, we first mapped their current support process. While their telephone support was excellent, they struggled with email and text support, and had no presence on social media platforms. This was largely because volunteers found it difficult to manage multiple communication systems.

Mapping of the current experience of the Samaritan users
By mapping the current experience of the Samaritan users, we identified weaknesses that we could address in our UX strategy. (Large preview)

We then created an aspirational journey map showing a unified system where volunteers could manage all communication channels through a single interface. This clear vision gave the organization a concrete goal that would improve the experience for both users seeking help and the volunteers providing support.

Mapping of an aspirational experience
Mapping an aspirational experience provided a clear vision everybody could work towards. (Large preview)

This vision gives everyone something to rally around. It also guides your later actions by showing the target state.

Audit Resources And Influence

Next, turn your attention to what you have to work with. List your UX team members and their skills. Note any budget set aside for research tools or software licenses. Then identify where you have influence across the organization. Which teams already seek your advice? Who trusts your guidance? That might be the product group or marketing. You’ll lean on these allies to spread UX best practices.

Finally, consider who else matters. Are there policy owners, process leads, or executives you need on board? Jot down names and roles so you can loop them in later.

Spot Your Constraints

Every strategy must live within real‑world limits. Maybe there’s a headcount freeze. Or IT systems won’t support a major overhaul. List any technical, budget, or policy limits you face. Then accept them. You’ll design your strategy to deliver value without asking for impossible changes. Working within constraints boosts your credibility. It also forces creativity.

With the diagnosis complete, we know where we stand. Next, let’s look at how to steer our efforts.

Guiding Policies: Set the North Star

Guiding policies give you guardrails. They help you decide which opportunities to chase and which to skip. These policies reflect your priorities and the best path forward.

Choose A Tactical Or Strategic Approach

Early on, you must pick how your UX team will operate. You have two broad options:

  • Tactical
    You embed UX people on specific projects. They run tests and design interfaces hands‑on. This needs a bigger team. I like a ratio of one UX pro for every two developers.
  • Strategic
    You act as a center of excellence. You advise other teams. You build guidelines, run workshops, and offer tools. This needs fewer hands but a broader influence.

Weigh your resources against your goals. If you need to move fast on many projects, go tactical. If you want to shift mindsets, work strategically. Choose the approach with the best chance of success.

Define A Prioritization Method

You’ll face many requests for UX work. A clear way to sort them saves headaches. Over the years, I’ve used a simple digital triage. You score each request based on impact, effort, and risk. Then, you work on the highest‑scoring items first. You can adapt this model however you like. The point is to have a repeatable, fair way to say yes or no.

Create A Playbook Of Principles

A playbook holds your core design principles, standard operating procedures, and templates. It might include:

  • A design system for UI patterns;
  • Standards around accessibility or user research;
  • Guides for key tasks such as writing for the web;
  • Templates for common activities like user interviews.

This playbook becomes your team’s shared reference. It helps others repeat your process. It also captures the know‑how you need as your team grows.


A playbook helps you document your strategies, policies, principles, and standard operating procedures. (Large preview)

Plan Your Communication

Strategy fails when people don’t know about it. You need a plan to engage stakeholders. I find it helpful to use a RACI chart — who is Responsible, Accountable, Consulted, and Informed. Then decide:

  • How often will you send updates?
  • Which channels should you use (email, Slack, weekly demos)?
  • Who leads each conversation?

Clear, regular communication keeps everyone looped in. It also surfaces concerns early so you can address them.

With guiding policies in place, you have a clear way to decide what to work on. Now, let’s turn to making things happen.

Action Plan: Bring Strategy To Life

Actions are the concrete steps you take to deliver on your guiding policies. They cover the projects you run, the support you give, and the risks you manage.

Outline Key Projects And Services #

Start by listing the projects you’ll tackle. These might be:

  • Running a discovery phase for a new product.
  • Building a design system for your marketing team.
  • Conducting user tests on your main flow.

For each project, note what you will deliver and when. You can use your digital triage scores to pick the highest priorities. Keep each project scope small enough to finish in a few sprints. That way, you prove value quickly.

Offer Training And Tools

If you choose a strategic approach, you need to empower others. Plan workshops on core UX topics. Record short videos on testing best practices. Build quick reference guides. Curate a list of tools:

  • Prototyping apps,
  • Research platforms,
  • Analytics dashboards.

Make these resources easy to find in your playbook.

Assign Stakeholder Roles

Your strategy needs executive backing. Identify a senior sponsor who can break through roadblocks. Outline what you need them to do. Maybe it’s championing a new budget line or approving key hires. Also, pin down other collaborators. Who on the product side will help you scope new features? Who on the IT team will support user research tooling? Getting clear roles avoids confusion.

Manage Risks and Barriers

No plan goes off without a hitch. List your biggest risks, such as:

  • A hiring freeze delays tactical hires;
  • Key stakeholders lose interest;
  • Technical debt slows down new releases.

For each risk, jot down how you’ll handle it. Maybe you should shift to a fully strategic approach if hiring stalls. Or you can send a weekly one‑page update to reengage sponsors. Having a fallback keeps you calm when things go sideways.

Before we wrap up, let’s talk about making strategy stick.

Embedding UX Into The Culture

A strategy shines only if you deeply embed it into your organization’s culture. Here’s how to make that happen:

  • Build awareness and enthusiasm
    • Run regular “lunch and learn” sessions to showcase UX wins.
    • Host an annual UX day or mini-conference to boost visibility.
    • Create a monthly UX salon where teams share challenges and victories.
  • Make UX visible and tangible
    • Display personas and journey maps in office spaces.
    • Add design principles to everyday items like mousepads and mugs.
    • Share success metrics and improvements in company communications.
  • Embed UX into processes
    • Establish clear UX policies and best practices.
    • Review and update procedures that might hinder a good user experience.
    • Create a healthy competition between teams through UX metrics.

These tactics transform your strategy from a document into an organizational movement. They foster a culture where everyone thinks about user experience, not just the UX team. Remember, cultural change takes time — but consistent, visible efforts will gradually shift mindsets across the organization.

Implementing Your UX Strategy: From Plan To Practice

We started by diagnosing your current state. Then we set policies to guide your efforts. Finally, we laid out an action plan to deliver results. This three-part framework keeps your UX work tied to real business needs. It also gives you clarity, focus, and credibility.

However, creating a strategy is the easy part — implementing it is where the real challenge lies. This is precisely why the book Strategy and the Fat Smoker carries its distinctive title. Just as someone who is overweight or smokes knows exactly what they need to do, we often know what our UX strategy should be. The difficult part is following through and making it a reality.

Success requires consistent engagement and persistence in the face of setbacks. As Winston Churchill wisely noted,

“Success is going from failure to failure with no loss of enthusiasm.”

This perfectly captures the mindset needed to implement a successful UX strategy — staying committed to your vision even when faced with obstacles and setbacks