🧠 Activating a Designer
This guide outlines the process of activating a Product Designer for your feature, initiative, or UX enhancement. Design works in weekly design sprints and follows a structured process to ensure clarity, focus, and timely delivery. Please review the following steps to engage design support effectively.
βœ… Step 1: Fill Out the Design Intake Form
Before any work can begin, all design requests must start with a completed Product Design Intake Form. This form ensures alignment on goals, value, timeline, and collaborators. Once filled out, the form will be submitted to our {insert button}
πŸ“ Note: Intake forms must be fully completed before being triaged. The form link will be provided {insert Button}
🎯 Step 2: Choose the Type of Design Activation
Designers work across varying levels of fidelity, depth, and effort. Choosing the right Design Activation Type helps scope the work accordingly.
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Each activation will help the designer determine:
  • The estimated time required
  • The expected deliverables
  • The collaborators needed during the sprint
πŸ§ͺ Step 3: Understand the Typical Design Process
Here’s what to expect once a designer has been activated:
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Each step involves collaboration with stakeholders, engineering, and product management. Your responsiveness to reviews and feedback requests ensures on-time delivery.
πŸ“… Step 4: Design Review Facilitation
Design reviews occur at key checkpoints in the sprint to gather feedback and align with product and engineering goals. These reviews are typically:
  • Weekly or bi-weekly
  • Conducted live or async, depending on team availability
  • Facilitated by the designer, who will walk through the current work and request specific feedback
All feedback should be delivered within the review window to keep timelines on track.
⏱ Step 5: Receive a Time Estimation
Once the request is reviewed, the designer will provide an effort estimation in weeks, based on:
  • Type of design activation
  • Complexity of the request
  • Dependencies or technical constraints
Typical turnaround times:
  • 1 week = Small updates, polish, or flows
  • 2–3 weeks = Net-new features, multiple states
  • 4+ weeks = Cross-feature flows, concept exploration, or research-heavy work
πŸ“Š Step 6: Track Design Progress
You can track your design request directly through JIRA. Once your intake form is submitted:
  • A JIRA ticket will be created and updated throughout the sprint
  • Statuses include: Backlog, In Progress, Review, Blocked, Ready for Handoff, Done
  • Comment directly in JIRA or Slack for async check-ins
πŸ” You’ll also be tagged in weekly sprint updates and notified of upcoming design reviews.