Lessy hero composite: sign-up flow on the left with property image revealed in stripes; dashboard on the right showing price prediction and applicant matches.
Product · 2023

An onboarding redesign the business pivoted around.

I redesigned the sign-up flow and dashboard for Lessy's primary user: real-estate agents on desktop. Sign-up conversion lifted 5%, and the dashboard work shaped the product's next direction.

RoleLead Product Designer
ClientLessy
Year2023
DisciplinesProduct · Research · Stakeholder management

Brief

Lift sign-up conversion on Lessy's web app and design a property-report dashboard that gave real-estate agents a single place to compare properties, generate price predictions, and review applicant matches. Desktop first, since that was where the work actually happened.

Problem

70% of Lessy's users were real-estate agents, and their admin lived on desktop, in long sessions across multiple tabs. The product had been built on mobile-first patterns the agents weren't using that way: a sign-up flow that asked for too much at once, and a home surface that didn't lead with the data agents kept opening other tabs to find.

My role

As Lead Product Designer on Lessy, I led the redesign end-to-end:

  • Mapped the existing sign-up flow against drop-off and account-manager feedback
  • Sketched and tested two flow directions before settling on a three-step model
  • Defined the dashboard's information architecture and four-surface layout
  • Composed every screen from the Lessy design system, no new primitives
  • Ran usability sessions with agents and iterated against their feedback
  • Worked alongside engineering through build, QA and ship

Approach

Three principles guided the redesign:

  • Desktop focus. Designed for the admin workflow agents actually had, not a hand-me-down mobile pattern.
  • Progressive disclosure. Only what's needed, when it's needed. Cognitive load drops, completion goes up.
  • Gamification. An interactive background that gradually unveils a property image as the user advances. A small motivator that makes a transactional flow feel earned.

Flow exploration

I sketched two directions for the sign-up flow before testing them against agents. The first packed identity, role and property association into a single dense screen with the form on the left and the property image on the right. It read fast, but it asked agents to commit to too many decisions at once and the property image had no relationship to progress.

The second direction broke the same fields into three steps and tied the property image to step completion: each step revealed another stripe of the photograph behind. Same fields, lighter cognitive load, and a small visual reward for moving forward. Agents completed the second direction faster in testing, and that's the one that shipped.

Sign-up flow exploration B: three-step layout with the property photograph revealed progressively across steps.
Direction B: three steps, property image revealed across them. The one that shipped.
Sign-up flow board: every screen state laid out side by side, from email through role selection to property association.
Sign-up flow board: every state, from email through role to property association.
Outcome

Conversion up. Strategy reshaped.

+5%
conversion on sign-up flow
70%
of users on desktop, designed for them
1
business pivot driven by the dashboard work

Final designs

Two acts. The sign-up flow first, then the dashboard that shaped the product's next chapter.

Three-step sign-up flow: identity, role selection, property association. The property photograph is revealed progressively across steps.
Three-step sign-up: identity, role, property association. Each step reveals more of the property image behind.

Property report dashboard

A dynamic, data-driven property report for renters and agents. The brief: compare properties, generate price predictions, and surface application matches, all pulling from Lessy's community data and external APIs.

Four primary surfaces: price prediction (90-day forecast on comparable properties), application summary (active applications with applicant detail), renter matches (surfaces from the Lessy community), and quick actions (landlord reports, rental appraisals, evaluations).

Property report dashboard with four surfaces: 90-day price prediction chart, application summary, renter matches, and a quick actions panel.
Property report: comparison, prediction, application matches.

Built on the design system

Every screen here uses the Lessy design system: same tokens, same components, same behaviour patterns as the rest of the platform. The dashboard didn't add new primitives. It composed them.

Component inventory composed into the dashboard: card, chart, status-tag, button, input, badge — all drawn from the Lessy design system.
Components: composed, not invented.

Methods

End-to-end design User testing Stakeholder management Ideation Collaboration Progressive disclosure Gamification
Next project

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