INDEPRO
Product design and research to make process/project management more usable, useful, and engaging for DLR Group employees.
March 2024 – Present
INDEPRO
March 2024 – Present

DLR Group prides itself on its integrated design process. They also pride themselves on an app called INDEPRO that was created to standardize this process and make it scalable and accessible to the entire firm. However, when you ask around different offices if people use INDEPRO or even if they know what it is, the answers do not produce a lot of confidence.
As a product designer, my job was to first conduct research to understand why employees weren’t using INDEPRO in the majority of their projects. I then presented my findings back to leadership to help them determine whether to continue to invest in the app. When leadership decided to move forward with INDEPRO, it was my job to then use these findings to design a solution that would improve utilization and make INDEPRO the tool it was dreamed to be.
DLR Group
Omaha, NE, US
The first iteration of INDEPRO will launch in January of 2026, but we have been drumming up excitement by presenting across the firm, engaging employee owners in usability testing and interviews, and ensuring firm leadership is not only informed but involved in the overall design direction.
Leadership Alignment
System Usability Score
Net Promoter Score
Of testers reported workflows aligned with real project needs
Usability blockers uncovered and addressed
Increase anticipated in project utilization
Our solution not only enhanced the usability of the app but increased the usefulness by adding in features that boosted habitual usage, created time savings for users, and enhanced project management for the firm as a whole.
DLR Group prides itself on its integrated design process. They also pride themselves on an app called INDEPRO that was created to standardize this process and make it scalable and accessible to the entire firm. However, when you ask around different offices if people use INDEPRO or even if they know what it is, the answers do not produce a lot of confidence.

With offices around the globe housing specialized design expertise, DLR Group’s integrated design teams are backed by more than 1,700 design professionals and the resources of the entire firm. Mostly Architect or Engineer led, these teams consist of design professionals across many disciplines all working together to execute built projects for high profile clients like Google, Boeing, and Marriott, and etc.

The core of the challenge was to first understand why employees weren’t using INDEPRO in the majority of their projects. This would help DLR Group determine whether to continue investing in INDEPRO or make the difficult decision to cut funding and sunset the app. If leadership decided to move forward with INDEPRO, it was my job to then use these learnings to suggest possible solutions to improve utilization and make INDEPRO the tool it was dreamed to be.
After a few key meetings with leadership, I mapped out a plan that would first help me understand INDEPRO’s current shortcomings, then use my findings to design the best possible solution.
Redlining, Heuristic Analysis, Usability Testing
Interviews, Persona Development, and Journey Mapping
Userflow, Sketches, Layout & Flow, Prototypes
Usability Testing, Findings Analysis & Synthesis, Feedback Implementation
Refining based on Feedback, Screen Resolution Adaptations, Development Handoff
As I started recruiting people to interview about why no one was using INDEPRO, I took some time to do my own redlining to get a feel for the decisions that had been made up to this point.
Project Dashboard

Project Overview / Tasks

Initialize Project

Summary
The interface suffers from poor hierarchy, low discoverability, and non-functioning features, creating unnecessary clicks and confusion. Core tasks like finding projects and progressing through phases feel hidden or unintuitive, making the overall experience inefficient and frustrating.
Before getting too deep into design, my team decided to take a step back and do some research to understand two things. The first being that we have a piece of software that no one was using and we need to investigate why. The second piece was that in order to understand how INDEPRO can fit into people’s daily lives, we also needed to take a step back and understand who our users are, and how they do their work.
Research Goals:

Within the research, these six points emerged as areas to explore for INDEPRO 2.0. There are overlaps between some of these areas. They’re not 6 distinct findings, but rather interrelated areas for exploration. The presentation we gave to leadership focused in on these 6 findings.

Useful in meetings. Project managers use it every day. Team members open it regularly.
“If I could literally just say Sue is gonna do that by next Thursday, I would use it more“ – Interviewee
Subtractive not additive to workflow. Automate mundane tasks. Reduce number of meetings. Replace existing tools. Relevant project templates. Connectivity to Vantagepoint & Planifi.
“Setting up a project is just adding work to someone’s workflow“– Interviewee
Notifications for deadlines, statuses, phase start and end, task completion/end/delinquency. Project updates and suggestions. Links to Campus.
“The completion date moved 6 months earlier. Nothing was said to me. So, there I was, pulling everything together in the last minute because I had just found out.” – Interviewee
Project planning, projecting, tracking, reporting, and cadence. Keeping track of everything we do. Show critical path and where people fit within it.
“To me, when we totally blow a budget, it’s because there was some big breakdown in the process that blew a bunch of hours and there’s no way to get them back” – Interviewee
All team members can view entire project plan. Leaders have access to financials and other necessary project info.
“Teams are complaining that people are just getting thrown on their project and they have no idea who this person is or why they’re on the project” – Interviewee
Account permission and security. Defining users such as PM’s, individual contributors, clients, contractor, and, etc. User specific views and content.
“We need different permissions and to establish who’s responsible“ – Interviewee
The last part of research we did was a competitive analysis across different task management tools, some being architecture specific. This was included in the research presentation given to leadership to help make the decision on whether to keep INDEPRO or sunset it and go with a competitor.

In talking stakeholders and other key people in DLR Group that had a high understanding of INDEPRO and who should use it, two key personas surfaced as the main user groups – Team Leads (PMs, Client Leads, Design Leads) and Individual Integrated Team Members.


Mapping out the user journey for marking a task complete helped me to identify some key pain points and also improvement opportunities for a future solution.

After leadership had a chance to digest all of my research findings, we collaborated on a loose site help to help us determine the overall vision for INDEPRO 2.0.

As a project manager, I want to view all the tasks for a project, see who’s assigned to them and where they fall on the overall timeline and also be able to view more info for each one and edit specific details such as date, assignee, and discipline.

My initial sketches focused heavily on the Gantt view of the task section and how a user would view and interact with a task.

At this point in the process, the stakeholders requested a rough picture of how the task flow would go within a project before we dialed further into the details.

After presenting the initial project task flow design, the product manager and I collaborated with stakeholders to prioritize the Gantt view, Kanban view, and task card, as these could be integrated into the current INDEPRO platform. I was then tasked with refining these screens and preparing them for user testing.
Gantt View
Projects are organized in a clear hierarchy with a Gantt view to visualize timelines and dependencies, while the task list streamlines workflow through quick edits to assignees and statuses.

Task Card
The task modal enables in-context editing, and assignee photos enhance recognition and connection.

Kanban View
The Kanban view displays tasks as movable cards with containers indicating nesting levels.

It was time to gather user feedback beyond our primary stakeholders and internal team. At the suggestion of our primary stakeholder, we took an approach slightly different from our usual process. I conducted four traditional usability tests with employee owners across various career levels, alongside feedback sessions with four discipline leaders. These sessions allowed leadership to not only interact with the tool but also provide design input. The usability tests yielded valuable insights into overall functionality, while the leadership sessions helped them understand the tool, contribute early feedback, and feel invested in the design process.
Research Goals:
KPI’s:

Employee Owner.
Employee Owner.
Employee Owner.
After synthesizing and analyzing all of the user feedback, a few key findings surfaced.

Overall, users found the main navigation to be intuitive and easily understandable. They quickly understood the flow and where they were within a project. It reminded them of other apps they use regularly.
“It all feels like things I’ve used before, but different from the current INDEPRO, like in a good way.” – User
People didn’t understand names of task levels such as Milestone and Deliverable. Many users were confused by the term Core Principles.
“For me, deliverable, milestone, task wasn’t an important way of me thinking about how we’ve approached this” – User
Many people asked if they could collapse all items on the task list and even collapse the panel itself. All users weren’t able to grasp the function of the Task, Discipline, and Principle filter chips.
“The lefthand column is a lot on the Gantt view, I’d like to collapse it” – User
“I don’t know what I’m clicking right now” – User
People had a hard time finding the plus on hover, and ones that did assumed it was to add a sub-task under a parent. While most users were eventually able to open a task card, most people asked about some sort of hover functionality to make it more obvious.
“The name of the task should feel more clickable, I didn’t get that right away” – User
People felt like the important details of a task should all be above the fold. Users also had a hard time grasping how the dependency section worked and assigning duration. The UX felt complicated and confusing.
“Dependency is a little confusing. I have no idea what predecessor and successor means” – User
For most users the nesting relationships were not clear from a visual standpoint. Users also stated the with the way they use a Kanban board, visual nesting would complicate functionality.
“It’s a little tricky to understand nesting relationships visually” – User
After presenting the findings from the usability tests, I collaborated closely with stakeholders and the product manager to prioritize insights, determine which recommendations would have the greatest impact, and define the features to implement in the final solution.
Gantt View: Task Management
Updates include a ‘Create New’ button, enhanced quick filters, collapsible task lists, expanded quick edit options, and consistent hover effects for all clickable elements.

Add a Task
The new task card is designed to appear clean and unpopulated, ready for user input.

Task Card
Primary content is scannable and editable above the fold, with dependencies listed clearly and an activity/comments section included.

Kanban View: Task Management
Columns can now be grouped by criteria, with tasks sortable, scrollable, and editable; cards support quick edits and opening the full task modal. Additional visual hierarchies have been removed.

Table View: Task Management
A new table view allows rows to be grouped by specific criteria with sticky headers for context, supporting task creation, sorting, quick edits, and full access to task details.

The INDEPRO project highlighted that adoption challenges aren’t always about the design itself—sometimes the value lies in aligning the tool with users’ actual workflows. While the interface needed improvement, the bigger opportunity was embedding project management practices into the platform in a way that felt natural and immediately useful to employees. Conducting research across offices revealed where real pain points existed, from low awareness to misaligned processes, and guided design decisions that made the app both intuitive and relevant. By engaging users and leadership throughout, we didn’t just update the UI; we redefined the tool’s value proposition so it would genuinely support the work people were already doing, creating excitement and increasing anticipated adoption.
INDEPRO reinforced that design alone cannot drive adoption—tools succeed when they solve real user problems. By embedding project management processes into an intuitive, user-centered interface, I learned that the most impactful solutions combine usability with meaningful, workflow-aligned value, making the tool indispensable rather than optional.