WELLIA - REDESIGN
WELLIA - APP
Year
2025
Redesigning a B2B mental health app to make daily wellbeing feel intuitive and personal.
Client project as sole UX/UI designer. Homepage redesign and new onboarding flow for a guided 8-week wellness path - designed to make the app more intuitive and meaningful for employees using it daily.
Scope of Work

Design Challenge
Wellia is a B2B mental health app used by companies to support employee wellbeing. The existing homepage lacked a clear visual hierarchy - everything competed for attention equally, leaving users without orientation or a natural way to navigate the app. The client needed two things: a restructured homepage that employees could read and use intuitively from the first glance, and a new feature introducing a guided 8-week wellness path with meditations. As part of the project I also designed the app's cloud mascot, generated with AI and refined to fit the brand's calm, approachable tone.
What Changed & Why
Hierarchy that guides, not overwhelmes. The old homepage lacked a clear visual structure - everything had the same weight, leaving users without orientation or a natural starting point. The redesign establishes a clear priority: a personal greeting, quick shortcuts to key features, a weekly mood chart, and a daily wellness tip. Every element has a reason to be there and a place in the flow.
From scattered to structured. With a clear hierarchy in place, the app finally feels like a daily companion rather than a collection of disconnected features. Users know where they are, what to do next, and what to expect every time they open it.
Introducing the guided path. A new onboarding flow walks users through an 8-week structured program of meditations and exercises. Rather than dropping users into an open library, the guided path gives them a clear starting point and a sense of progression — which is especially important in a mental health context where commitment and consistency matter.

Key Learning
In mental health products, clarity is care. A cluttered or confusing interface doesn't just frustrate users - it creates a barrier at exactly the moment they need support. Every design decision here was made with that responsibility in mind.



