What we build

UI/UX Design

Interfaces people actually want to use — fewer screens, clearer decisions, design that survives contact with real users.

Overview

What we build

Good design isn't decoration — it's fewer screens, clearer decisions, and flows that match how people actually work. We design product interfaces, internal dashboards, and AI experiences (chat, agents, copilots) where the hard part is making powerful things feel simple. Every design ships with a system behind it, so the tenth screen is as coherent as the first.

  • Product & app UI design
  • Dashboards & internal tools
  • AI experience design (chat, agents, copilots)
  • Design systems & component libraries
  • Prototypes & usability testing
How it works

Scoped small. Shipped fast. Proven live.

1

Understand the job

We watch how the work actually happens before drawing anything.

2

Design the decision

Every screen is organised around the decision the user needs to make on it.

3

System, not screens

A component system so the product stays coherent as it grows.

A team collaborating in a dark office lit by violet monitor glow

If users need a manual, the design failed. Powerful should still feel obvious.

Outcomes

What you get

Flows that need no training
AI features people trust and adopt
A design system your team can extend
Interfaces that sell the product in demos
FAQs

Questions, answered straight.

What makes UI/UX design for AI products different?

AI products introduce uncertainty into the interface — outputs vary, confidence matters, and users need control over what the AI does. Designing for AI means showing what the system did and why, making review and correction effortless, and building trust through transparency, not just clean visuals.

What is included in a UI/UX design engagement?

Typically: user and workflow research, information architecture, wireframes, high-fidelity screens, interactive prototypes, and a component design system. Joistic designs alongside engineering, so what's designed is what actually ships.

Why do internal tools and dashboards need real design?

Because your team uses them for hours every day. A dashboard that surfaces the right numbers and hides the noise saves time on every single use — and adoption of internal tools (including AI tools) depends far more on usability than on features.

Does Joistic redesign existing products or only new ones?

Both. Redesigns start with an audit of where users struggle today, then improve the highest-friction flows incrementally — so the product gets better without forcing a disruptive big-bang change on existing users.

How does a design system help a growing product?

A design system is a library of reusable components and rules that keeps every new screen consistent with the last. It makes design and development faster, keeps the product coherent as the team grows, and prevents the slow drift into a patchwork UI.

Sharper operations. Smarter teams.
Let's build yours.

Start with one workflow. See the ROI before you scale.

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