Education - Final Assignment

June - July 2020
UX Design
Concept design

Commuters struggle to complete online top-ups within the current system; due to its lack of mobile support, finnicky layout and text heavy presentation, resulting in an arduous experience for commuters on the go.

I started by doing some desk research. I wanted to determine the desirability of revising the current mobile top up flow; considering that myki presently does not have an app, and services android users through Google Pay, I went to product review to see what the general public had to say about myki.
The general consensus is largely negative with a rating of 1.3 stars across 47 veviews. I moved past the reviews that focused on staff and found that the same complaints kept reoccurring:
It would appear that there is a want for a better system. I am aware that the android system has a decent level of uptake but some users (my colleagues) ditched the system after numerous touch-on read errors. So for my solution, I would maintain physical cards but have a mobile method of management.
Transport for London have an app dedicated to topping up an oyster card; a user can view transaction history, check balances and card expiry dates, and view if you have incomplete journeys.
Japan has the Suica system; it is the highest rated service out of those I looked at; garnering praise from commuters for effective top-up balances and the ability to see real-time spending on the card (it should be noted that Suica can be used in place of dedit cards).
Sydney’s Opal system is placed in the middle; sharing similarities with Oyster and Suica. The user can top-up from their mobile device, and can view travel information, but cannot use their card for purchases.

I ran through the current tip-up system with 4 users to gain further understanding of their experiences. Testers came from different age groups and held variying degrees of technical ability.


Users may not live near a physical top-up point; or they are tourists and don’t know where top-up locations are; or need to top up immediately due to a low balance.
A mixture of Jakob's Law in effect, and concern about pulling out physical cards to finalise top-ups in public.
Complaints started to arise that the payments process was taking too long and they didn’t know how much longer it was going to take.
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Users mistook the tracker as a loading bar

Email: afrosthead@gmail.com
© Alex Frost-Head 2021
UX & UI designer