UX Zen Studio Archives
Published Docs
Hey, there I am publishing the general workflow which has enhanced my working as a UX Lead over the past years and hope it helps your team gain clarity in the chaotic jungle we call UI/UX Design there are more parts to it elaborating on Design Documentation, Training requisites, and CX Analytics which also create your designerβs report card.
Use it to your benefit. This is nothing not already known but and updated consolidation and my personal winners in creating a reliable and sustainable process pipeline and hope it helps you as well.
Cheers!
[Assumption: SaaS B2B industry where we work with reports as deliverables across multiple portfolios. Same can be replaced with phase launches/milestones, seasonal products, etc.]

Technical Documentation:
UX Zen Studio Design Operations & Workflows SOP
Design Standard Operating Procedure, a guide for designers to enable collaboration and fluid work efficiency. Scaling UX Operations with a Systems-Oriented Framework for Design.
By: Utkarsh Saxena | www.uxzen.studio
01. Project Initiation: Research, Conceptualization, and Scope
- [Situation]: Blurring foundational problem definition with tactical execution introduces unpredictable variables into UX Zen Studio's pipeline, stalling delivery timelines and fracturing stakeholder alignment.
- [Success Criteria]: The Research and Conceptualization phase is strictly isolated to understanding user needs and business context; tactical design execution is strictly prohibited during this phase. Furthermore, any Branding scope within this operational pipeline is explicitly limited to collateral enhancements, completely omitting full identity creation.
- [Importance]: Enforcing strict methodological boundaries guarantees predictable resource allocation and prevents scope creep, ensuring pipeline optimization for B2B and tech product clients.
- [Ideal Outcome]: The design team transitions into tactical execution only after securing complete stakeholder alignment on validated user problems and precise deliverable expectations.
- [Risks / Best vs. Worst Result]:
- Best Result: High process compliance yields accurate project timelines and precise deliverables.
- Worst Result: Unchecked tactical execution during discovery leads to misaligned architectural decisions and severe delivery delays.
02. File Handling & Organization Structure
- [Situation]: Unstructured file management and chaotic canvas layouts stall delivery, disrupt stakeholder alignment, and increase cognitive load when locating project assets.
- [Success Criteria]:
- Figma Projects: Used exclusively as the top-level container to designate the overarching Portfolio name.
- Files: Must be structured strictly using the
[Project Name] - [Report Name] format.
- Pages: Utilized for housing specific milestones, including version control, the "Read Me" block, and dedicated Archive pages.
- Sections: Deployed exclusively within the canvas for segregating complex user flows and applying semantic color-coding to distinct logic branches.
- Shared Cloud Repository (Non-Figma Assets): External repositories must mirror this hierarchy (
Portfolios π > Projects π > Reporting Units π) utilizing deep folder nesting to guarantee digital-to-physical scalability.
- [Importance]: A rigid, universally adopted hierarchy eradicates friction for cross-functional teams, ensuring immediate asset retrieval and optimizing the handoff pipeline.
- [Ideal Outcome]: Stakeholders, core contributors, and cross-functional partners navigate complex project architectures intuitively without requiring navigational guidance.
- [Risks / Best vs. Worst Result]:
- Best Result: Faster iterations and highly structured hand-offs.
- Worst Result: Critical supplementary assets become orphaned or detached from their core design counterparts, causing severe deployment bottlenecks.
Best Practices: File Handling
- Library Isolation: Maintain a completely separate file for the master style guide and design library. Edit access must be strictly restricted to prevent unauthorized appendages.
- Page Categorization via Separators: Deploy blank, un-clickable separator pages to enforce a strict three-tier page architecture:
-- System --- (Contains the Read Me / Summary page, Research page)
-- Work Area --- (Contains active execution pages, "Ready for Dev", and variations)
-- Archive --- (Contains Playground/graveyard, and past versions)
- Progressive Canvas Layout: When organizing frames, anchor the main screens at the far left of the canvas. Progressively move to the right for variations, sub-screens, and prototype flows. Begin the subsequent user flow directly below the first, restarting alignment from the left axis.
- In-Canvas Milestone Tracking: Construct high-level Gantt charts or timeline views directly within the canvas to ensure stakeholder alignment on project phases without external documentation switching.
- WIP Markers: Deploy clear visual status indicators (e.g., color-coded file thumbnails or label components) to instantly communicate the Work In Progress status at the browser level.
03. Nomenclature Conventions
- [Situation]: Abstract or generalized file names and default layer outputs inevitably lead to workflow bottlenecks, rendering assets unsearchable and causing costly deployment errors.
- [Success Criteria]:
- Standard Formatting: All project assets must utilize the strict structural format detailed below.
- Categorization: Forward slashes (
/) must be utilized to categorize elements and group elements hierarchically within the Assets Panel.
- [Importance]: Programmatic casing conventions align design outputs directly with front-end development syntax, optimizing the handoff pipeline and ensuring rigorous process compliance.
- [Ideal Outcome]: Absolute operational transparency, allowing any stakeholder to deduce asset context, iteration, and functional purpose immediately.
- [Risks / Best vs. Worst Result]:
- Best Result: Streamlined developer integration with zero translation errors during handoff.
- Worst Result: A chaotic file ecosystem where dependencies for knowledge transfer and guidance prevail.
Best Practices: Nomenclature
Standard Formatting Structure:
[Project/Feature]_[Screen/Component]_[Version]_[Date]
- Semantic Descriptors & Casing: Default names (e.g., "Frame 1", "Frame 42") are strictly prohibited. Utilize descriptive, semantic identifiers (e.g.,
Card/Product/Image) applying consistent PascalCase or snake_case conventions (e.g., btn/Primary). Keep Auto-Layout container names lightweight (e.g., List) to prevent layers panel clutter.
- AI Efficiency & Automation Tooling: Mandate the use of bulk renaming shortcuts for applying systemic patterns. Leverage AI renaming protocols to autonomously clean up legacy or unlabelled frames, drastically reducing operational turnaround time.
04. Grid & Spacing Systems
- [Situation]: Haphazard spacing logic fractures visual consistency and exponentially increases development complexity and CSS authoring time.
- [Success Criteria]: Layout foundations must utilize one of three authorized systems consistently per project:
- Option A (8pt Grid System): Base unit of 8 (tokens: 4px, 8px, 16px, 24px, 32px) for responsive digital products.
- Option B (5px Incremental System): Multiples of 5 (tokens: 5px, 10px, 15px, 20px) for simple arithmetic divisions.
- Option C (The Golden Ratio): 1:1.618 ratio for layout hierarchies and typography scaling in high-impact collateral enhancements.
- [Importance]: Mandating mathematical layout foundations guarantees systemic visual harmony and predictable component scaling across all active environments.
- [Ideal Outcome]: Accelerated turnaround time for engineering teams receiving perfectly standardized, scalable UI builds.
- [Risks / Best vs. Worst Result]:
- Best Result: Flawless responsive scaling and highly consistent front-end deployment.
- Worst Result: Fragmented user interfaces requiring constant manual adjustment and QA intervention.
05. Design Systems & Libraries
- [Situation]: Hardcoding colors or typography forces manual updates, introduces technical debt, and breaks digital-to-physical scalability.
- [Success Criteria]:
- All properties must pull directly from defined color styles and established typography variables (e.g.,
Heading/H1, Body/Regular).
- Every repeating UI element must be converted into a component.
- Detaching master components is prohibited; designers must strictly use instance overrides.
- Creation or modification of master styles requires mandatory external approval from Design Leads, Project Managers, Client POCs, and Lead Developers.
- [Importance]: Centralizing global design control ensures that a single token update automatically propagates across the ecosystem, enforcing process compliance.
- [Ideal Outcome]: A matured operation structure that elevates the quality of work through robust, highly scalable component libraries.
- [Risks / Best vs. Worst Result]:
- Best Result: Rapid turnaround time for systemic updates and comprehensive brand consistency.
- Worst Result: Fractured product architecture rendering systemic updates impossible.
06. Versions & Iteration Control
- [Situation]: Relying on unchecked, continuous canvases destroys the historical record of project evolution and stakeholder decisions, preventing safe rollbacks.
- [Success Criteria]:
- [Importance]: Establishing explicit milestones provides a chronological audit trail, ensuring team accountability and securing against accidental overwrites.