Files
sar/.agents/skills/wds-8-product-evolution/data/existing-product-guide.md
julian 17c08e6392 chore: initial monorepo scaffold + WDS Phase 1+2 artifacts
- Nx 22.7 monorepo (pnpm 11.1, TypeScript 5.9, Node 24)
- apps/api: NestJS 11 (CJS conforme CODING-RULES.md PGD-DB-004)
- apps/web: React 19 + Vite 8 (ESM)
- libs/shared/api-interface: Zod contract base
- Docker Compose dev: Postgres 18, Valkey 8, MinIO, Mailpit
- WDS artifacts:
  - design-artifacts/A-Product-Brief/ (5 docs canônicos + 16 dialogs)
  - design-artifacts/B-Trigger-Map/ (hub + 4 personas + feature impact)
- Stack canon: STACK.md v2.2 + CODING-RULES.md v2.0 + brand.md
- AGENTS.md + README.md como entrada para devs/agentes

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-27 14:34:20 +00:00

20 KiB

Phase 8: Product Evolution

Jump into an existing product to make strategic improvements


🔑 Key Point: You Still Create a Project Brief!

Brownfield projects (existing products) still need a Project Brief - just adapted to focus on:

  • The strategic challenge you're solving
  • The scope of changes
  • Success criteria
  • Constraints

You're not skipping Phase 1 - you're adapting it to the existing product context.


Two Entry Points to WDS

Entry Point 1: New Product (Phases 1-7) - Greenfield + Kaikaku

Starting from scratch, designing complete user flows

Terminology:

  • Greenfield: Building from scratch with no existing constraints
  • Kaikaku (改革): Revolutionary change, complete transformation

Entry Point 2: Existing Product (Phase 8) - Brownfield + Kaizen

Jumping into an existing product to make strategic changes

Terminology:

  • Brownfield: Working within existing system and constraints
  • Kaizen (改善): Continuous improvement, small incremental changes

This phase is for:

  • Existing products that need strategic improvements
  • Products where you're brought in as a "linchpin designer"
  • Situations where you're not designing complete flows from scratch
  • Making targeted changes to existing screens and features

Purpose

When joining an existing product, you:

  1. Focus on strategic challenges (not complete redesign)
  2. Make targeted improvements to existing screens
  3. Add new features incrementally
  4. Package changes as Design Deliveries (small scope)
  5. Work within existing constraints

This is a different workflow - you're not designing complete flows, you're making critical updates to an existing system.


Phase 8 Workflow (Existing Product)

Existing Product
    ↓
Strategic Challenge Identified
    ↓
┌─────────────────────────────────────┐
│ Step 01: Project Brief (Adapted)     │
│ - What strategic challenge?         │
│ - What are we trying to solve?      │
│ - Why bring in WDS designer?        │
│ - What's the scope?                 │
└─────────────────────────────────────┘
    ↓
┌─────────────────────────────────────┐
│ Step 02: Existing Context            │
│ - Upload business goals             │
│ - Upload target group material      │
│ - Print out trigger map             │
│ - Understand existing product       │
└─────────────────────────────────────┘
    ↓
┌─────────────────────────────────────┐
│ Step 03: Critical Updates            │
│ - Design targeted changes           │
│ - Update existing screens           │
│ - Add strategic features            │
│ - Focus on solving challenge        │
└─────────────────────────────────────┘
    ↓
┌─────────────────────────────────────┐
│ Step 04: Design Delivery             │
│ → [Touch Point 2: WDS → BMad]       │
│   Hand off changes (DD-XXX)         │
└─────────────────────────────────────┘
    ↓
┌─────────────────────────────────────┐
│ Step 05: Validation                  │
│ ← [Touch Point 3: BMad → WDS]       │
│   Designer validates                │
└─────────────────────────────────────┘
    ↓
✅ Deploy Changes
    ↓
(Repeat for next strategic challenge)

Project Setup: Choosing Your Entry Point

During project initialization, you'll be asked:

Which type of project are you working on?

1. New Product
   → Start with Phase 1 (Project Brief)
   → Design complete user flows from scratch
   → Full WDS workflow (Phases 1-7)

2. Existing Product
   → Start with Phase 8 (Product Evolution)
   → Make strategic improvements to existing product
   → Focused on critical updates, not complete redesign

If you choose "Existing Product" (Brownfield):

  • Phase 1 (Project Brief): Adapted - focus on strategic challenge, not full vision
  • Phase 2 (Trigger Map): Optional - print out focused trigger map if needed
  • Phase 3 (Platform Requirements): Skip - tech stack already decided
  • Phase 4-5: Adapted - update existing screens, not complete flows
  • Handover & Testing: Same - deliveries (Phase 4 [H]) and validation (Phase 5 [T]) work the same way

Step 01: Project Brief (Adapted for Brownfield)

IMPORTANT: You still create a Project Brief - just adapted to the existing product context.

Brownfield vs Greenfield:

  • Greenfield (New Product): Full Project Brief covering vision, goals, stakeholders, constraints
  • Brownfield (Existing Product): Focused Project Brief covering the strategic challenge and scope

You're not skipping the Project Brief - you're adapting it to focus on:

The Strategic Challenge

# Limited Project Brief: Existing Product

## Strategic Challenge

What specific problem are we solving?

Example:
"User onboarding has 60% drop-off rate. Users don't understand
the family concept and abandon during setup."

## Why WDS Designer?

Why bring in a linchpin designer now?

Example:
"We need expert UX design to redesign the onboarding flow and
improve completion rates to 80%+."

## Scope

What are we changing?

Example:
"Redesign onboarding flow (4 screens):

- Welcome screen (update copy and visuals)
- Family setup (simplify and clarify)
- Dog addition (make it optional for MVP)
- Success state (add celebration)"

## Success Criteria

How will we measure success?

Example:
"- Onboarding completion rate > 80%

- Time to complete < 2 minutes
- User satisfaction score > 4.5/5"

## Constraints

What can't we change?

Example:
"- Tech stack: React Native + Supabase (already built)

- Brand: Colors and logo are fixed
- Timeline: 2 weeks to design + implement
- Scope: Only onboarding, don't touch other features"

Step 02: Existing Context

Upload and review existing materials:

Business Goals

Upload: business-goals.pdf
Review: What's the company trying to achieve?

Target Group Material

Upload: user-personas.pdf
Upload: user-research.pdf
Review: Who are the users? What do they need?

Print Out Trigger Map

Based on existing materials, create a focused trigger map:
- What triggers bring users to this feature?
- What outcomes are they seeking?
- What's currently failing?

Example (Focused Trigger Map):

# Trigger Map: Onboarding Improvement

## Trigger Moment

User downloads app and opens it for the first time

## Current Experience

1. Welcome screen (confusing value prop)
2. Login/Signup choice (too many options)
3. Family setup (unclear what "family" means)
4. Dog addition (forced, feels like homework)
5. 60% drop off before reaching dashboard

## Desired Outcome

User understands value, completes setup, reaches dashboard

## Barriers

- Unclear value proposition
- "Family" concept is confusing
- Forced dog addition feels like work
- No sense of progress or achievement

## Solution Focus

- Clarify value prop on welcome screen
- Simplify family concept explanation
- Make dog addition optional
- Add progress indicators and celebration

Understand Existing Product

Review:
- Current app (use it yourself)
- Existing design system (if any)
- Technical constraints
- User feedback and analytics

Step 03: Critical Updates (Not Complete Flows)

Key difference: You're updating existing screens, not designing from scratch

Example: Onboarding Improvement

Scenario 01: Welcome Screen (Update)

# Scenario 01: Welcome Screen (UPDATE)

## What's Changing

- Clearer value proposition
- Better visual hierarchy
- Stronger call-to-action

## What's Staying

- Brand colors
- Logo placement
- Screen structure

## Design Updates

- Hero image: Show family using app together
- Headline: "Keep your family's dog care organized"
- Subheadline: "Share tasks, track routines, never miss a walk"
- CTA: "Get Started" (larger, more prominent)

## Components

- Existing: Button (Primary)
- Update: Hero Image component
- Update: Typography (larger headline)

Scenario 02: Family Setup (Redesign)

# Scenario 02: Family Setup (REDESIGN)

## Current Problem

Users don't understand what "family" means in this context

## Solution

- Rename "Family" to "Household"
- Add explanation: "Who helps take care of your dog?"
- Show examples: "You, your partner, your kids, your dog walker"
- Make it visual: Show avatars of household members

## Design Changes

- Screen title: "Set up your household"
- Explanation text (new)
- Visual examples (new)
- Simplified form (fewer fields)

## Components

- Existing: Input (Text)
- New: Explanation Card component
- New: Avatar Grid component

Scenario 03: Dog Addition (Make Optional)

# Scenario 03: Dog Addition (MAKE OPTIONAL)

## Current Problem

Forcing users to add a dog feels like homework, causes drop-off

## Solution

- Make it optional for onboarding
- Show value: "Add your first dog to get started"
- Allow skip: "I'll do this later"
- Celebrate if they add: "Great! Let's meet [dog name]!"

## Design Changes

- Add "Skip for now" button
- Add celebration animation if dog added
- Update copy to be inviting, not demanding

## Components

- Existing: Button (Primary, Secondary)
- New: Celebration Animation component

Notice the difference:

  • Not designing complete flows from scratch
  • Updating existing screens strategically
  • Focused on solving specific problems
  • Working within existing constraints

What Triggers a Design Delivery?

Accumulated Changes

Small changes accumulate:

  • Bug fix: Button alignment
  • Refinement: Improved error message
  • Enhancement: New filter option
  • Fix: Loading state missing
  • Improvement: Better empty state

When enough changes accumulate:

10-15 small changes = Design Delivery
OR
3-5 medium features = Design Delivery
OR
1 major feature = Design Delivery

Business Triggers

Scheduled releases:

  • Monthly updates
  • Quarterly feature releases
  • Annual major versions

Market triggers:

  • Competitor feature launched
  • User demand spike
  • Business opportunity

Technical triggers:

  • Platform update (iOS 18, Android 15)
  • Security patch required
  • Performance optimization needed

Product Evolution Workflow

Step 1: Monitor & Gather Feedback

Sources:

  • User feedback (support tickets, reviews)
  • Analytics (usage patterns, drop-offs)
  • Team observations (bugs, issues)
  • Stakeholder requests (new features)

Track in backlog:

Backlog:
- [ ] Bug: Login button misaligned on iPad
- [ ] Enhancement: Add "Remember me" checkbox
- [ ] Feature: Social login (Google, Apple)
- [ ] Refinement: Improve onboarding copy
- [ ] Fix: Loading spinner not showing

Step 2: Prioritize Changes

Criteria:

  • Impact: High user value vs low effort
  • Urgency: Critical bugs vs nice-to-haves
  • Alignment: Strategic goals vs random requests
  • Feasibility: Quick wins vs complex changes

Prioritized list:

High Priority (Next Update):
1. Bug: Login button misaligned (Critical)
2. Fix: Loading spinner not showing (High)
3. Enhancement: Add "Remember me" (Medium)

Medium Priority (Future Update):
4. Feature: Social login (Medium)
5. Refinement: Improve copy (Low)

Low Priority (Backlog):
6. Enhancement: Dark mode (Low)

Step 3: Design Changes

Return to Phase 4-5:

  • Design fixes and refinements
  • Create specifications for new features
  • Update design system if needed
  • Document changes

Track changes:

Changes for Design Delivery DD-011 (v1.1):
✓ Fixed: Login button alignment on iPad
✓ Added: Loading spinner to all async actions
✓ Enhanced: "Remember me" checkbox on login
✓ Updated: Error messages for clarity
✓ Improved: Empty state when no tasks

Step 4: Create Design Delivery

When enough changes accumulate:

File: deliveries/DD-XXX-design-delivery-vX.X.yaml

delivery:
  id: 'DD-010'
  name: 'Product Update v1.1'
  type: 'incremental_improvement'
  scope: 'update'
  status: 'ready'
  priority: 'high'
  version: '1.1'

description: |
  Incremental improvements with bug fixes, refinements, and enhancements
  based on user feedback from v1.0 launch.

changes:
  bug_fixes:
    - 'Fixed login button alignment on iPad'
    - 'Added loading spinner to all async actions'
    - 'Fixed family invite code validation'

  enhancements:
    - "Added 'Remember me' checkbox on login"
    - 'Improved error messages (clearer wording)'
    - 'Better empty state for task list'

  design_system_updates:
    - 'Button component: Added loading state'
    - 'Input component: Improved error styling'

affected_scenarios:
  - id: '02-login'
    path: 'C-UX-Scenarios/02-login/'
    changes: "Added 'Remember me' checkbox, fixed alignment"

  - id: '06-task-list'
    path: 'C-UX-Scenarios/06-task-list/'
    changes: 'Improved empty state design'

user_value:
  problem: 'Users experiencing bugs and requesting improvements'
  solution: 'Bug fixes and enhancements based on feedback'
  success_criteria:
    - 'Bug reports decrease by 50%'
    - 'User satisfaction score increases'
    - 'Onboarding completion rate improves'

estimated_complexity:
  size: 'small'
  effort: '1 week'
  risk: 'low'
  dependencies: []

Step 5: Hand Off to BMad

Same process as Phase 4 [H] Handover:

  1. Create Design Delivery (DD-XXX.yaml)
  2. Create Test Scenario (TS-XXX.yaml)
  3. Handoff Dialog with BMad Architect
  4. BMad implements changes
  5. Designer validates (Phase 5 [T] Acceptance Testing)
  6. Sign off and deploy

BMad receives:

  • Design Delivery (DD-XXX)
  • Updated specifications
  • Design system changes
  • Test scenario

Step 6: Deploy Changes

After validation:

✅ Design Delivery DD-011 (v1.1) approved
✅ All tests passed
✅ Ready to deploy

Deployment:
- Version: v1.1.0
- Changes: 8 (3 bug fixes, 5 enhancements)
- Release notes: Generated from delivery
- Deploy to: Production

Release notes (auto-generated from delivery):

# Version 1.1 Release

## What's New

### Bug Fixes

- Fixed login button alignment on iPad
- Added loading spinner to all async actions
- Fixed family invite code validation

### Enhancements

- Added "Remember me" checkbox on login
- Improved error messages for clarity
- Better empty state when no tasks

### Design System Updates

- Button component now supports loading state
- Input component has improved error styling

Step 7: Monitor & Repeat

After deployment:

  • Monitor user feedback
  • Track analytics
  • Identify new issues
  • Plan next update

Continuous cycle:

v1.0 Launch
    ↓
Gather feedback (2 weeks)
    ↓
v1.1 Release (bug fixes + enhancements) - DD-011
    ↓
Gather feedback (4 weeks)
    ↓
v1.2 Release (new features) - DD-012
    ↓
Gather feedback (8 weeks)
    ↓
v2.0 Major Update (significant changes) - DD-020
    ↓
(Repeat)

Types of Updates

Patch Updates (v1.0.1)

Frequency: As needed (urgent bugs) Scope: Critical bug fixes only Timeline: 1-3 days

Example:

  • Critical: Login broken on iOS 17.2
  • Fix: Update authentication flow
  • Deploy: Emergency patch

Minor Updates (v1.1.0)

Frequency: Monthly or bi-weekly Scope: Bug fixes + small enhancements Timeline: 1-2 weeks

Example:

  • 3 bug fixes
  • 5 small enhancements
  • 2 design system updates
  • Deploy: Scheduled release

Major Updates (v2.0.0)

Frequency: Quarterly or annually Scope: New features + significant changes Timeline: 4-8 weeks

Example:

  • New feature: Calendar view
  • New feature: Family chat
  • Redesign: Navigation system
  • Major: Design system overhaul
  • Deploy: Major version release

Ongoing Collaboration

Designer & Developer Partnership

Designer:

  • Monitors user feedback
  • Identifies improvements
  • Designs changes
  • Creates deliveries
  • Validates implementation

Developer:

  • Implements changes
  • Suggests technical improvements
  • Provides feasibility feedback
  • Requests design clarification
  • Notifies when ready for testing

Together:

  • Regular sync meetings
  • Shared backlog
  • Collaborative prioritization
  • Continuous improvement
  • Mutual respect and trust

The Sunset Ride 🌅

After establishing the ongoing cycle:

Designer: "We've launched v1.0, iterated through v1.1 and v1.2,
           and now v2.0 is live. The product is mature, the
           process is smooth, and users are happy.

           The design-to-development workflow is humming along
           beautifully. We're a well-oiled machine!"

Developer: "Agreed! We've found our rhythm. Design Deliveries
            come in, we implement them, you validate, we ship.
            The 3 touch points work perfectly.

            Users love the product, stakeholders are happy,
            and we're continuously improving."

Designer: "Ready to ride into the sunset?"

Developer: "Let's go! 🌅"

[Designer and Developer ride off into the sunset together]

THE END! 🎬

Success Metrics

Process Health

Velocity:

  • Time from design to deployment
  • Number of updates per quarter
  • Backlog size and age

Quality:

  • Bug reports per release
  • User satisfaction scores
  • Design system compliance

Collaboration:

  • Handoff smoothness
  • Communication clarity
  • Issue resolution time

Product Health

Usage:

  • Active users
  • Feature adoption
  • Retention rates

Satisfaction:

  • User reviews
  • NPS scores
  • Support tickets

Business:

  • Revenue growth
  • Market share
  • Strategic goals met

Tips for Long-Term Success

DO

Maintain momentum:

  • Regular releases (don't go dark)
  • Continuous improvement
  • Respond to feedback
  • Celebrate wins

Keep quality high:

  • Don't skip validation
  • Maintain design system
  • Test thoroughly
  • Document changes

Communicate well:

  • Regular designer-developer sync
  • Clear priorities
  • Transparent roadmap
  • Stakeholder updates

Stay user-focused:

  • Listen to feedback
  • Measure impact
  • Iterate based on data
  • Solve real problems

DON'T

Don't let backlog grow:

  • Prioritize ruthlessly
  • Say no to low-value requests
  • Keep backlog manageable
  • Archive old items

Don't skip process:

  • Always create deliveries
  • Always validate
  • Always document
  • Always follow touch points

Don't lose sight:

  • Remember user value
  • Stay aligned with goals
  • Don't chase shiny objects
  • Focus on what matters

Don't burn out:

  • Sustainable pace
  • Realistic timelines
  • Celebrate progress
  • Take breaks

The Long Game

Year 1:

  • Launch v1.0 (MVP)
  • Iterate rapidly (v1.1, v1.2, v1.3)
  • Learn from users
  • Establish process

Year 2:

  • Major update v2.0
  • Mature product
  • Smooth process
  • Happy users

Year 3+:

  • Continuous evolution
  • Market leadership
  • Sustainable growth
  • Designer & Developer harmony

Resources

Product Evolution:

  • Return to Phase 4-5 for changes
  • Use Phase 4 [H] Handover for Design Deliveries (small scope)
  • Use Phase 5 [T] Acceptance Testing for validation
  • Repeat indefinitely

Templates:

  • Same templates as initial development
  • Add "system_update" type to deliveries
  • Track version numbers

Documentation:

  • Maintain changelog
  • Update release notes
  • Keep design system current
  • Document learnings

And they lived happily ever after, shipping great products together! 🌅

THE END! 🎬