Being the sole UX/UI designer not only is it a good idea to do those interviews in order to get feedback, but it's incredibly important to build your brand around the company! Getting in front of people will give you great feedback and build trust between you and the interviewee. After the interviews, make sure to collect it all, distill it, and let the people know what ultimately happened due to the feedback collected.
As far as structure and organization, Mural is a great way for organizing disparate thoughts. Plus they have templates that you can browse through and a great online user community as well.
>y más del 70% de los empleados son argentinos
Por ahora, mirá su página de contrataciones. La gran mayoría de empleados con ubicación específica que buscan tienen como requisito estar en Estados unidos. Pinta como que están preparando todo para escapar de Peronia en el futuro cercano. Y es lo mejor que pueden hacer, en un país que combate al capital lo mejor es irse.
I wrote a book in a similar space although it was mostly about the experiments to run early on when staring a business.
What helped me was to define my reader personas and interview / test draft content with them.
I have some YouTube videos on it and also a blog here if that helps good luck! https://www.mural.co/blog/how-to-plan-a-book-using-design-thinking
Looks great! The impressive thing about this is that you've done what a bunch of companies are already doing.
Check out bluescape, miro or mural:
https://www.bluescape.com https://miro.com https://www.mural.co
I recently discovered Mural. It’s like an online whiteboard and it’s great to jot down ideas, because you can also add all kinds of symbols, text boxes, notes to self, whatever you want really. And because it’s digital, unlike with a notebook, you can also delete ideas, shift them around etc. i think it’s quite useful in the early stages when you’re just collecting ideas and connecting some of them.
Unfortunately it is only free for the first five murals i think? But would still be worth giving it a try I think!
Just checked out OrgPad. It is an amazing too.
A feature request: one of the killer features of Mural is that you can copypaste a link, and it will create a visually identifiable preview card for the link. That could be nice for OrgPad too.
Check that out: https://www.mural.co/ (seriously, that is the main advantage causing me to use Mural over other tools.)
I used this website! You have to make an account, but it's free. You only get 5 boards unless you pay, but the size of the board is customizable-- 18,000 x 18,000 pixels so far for me and counting!
(Totally going to transfer this to photoshop with a corkboard / red string aesthetic ~~if~~ when I finish, though)
https://www.mural.co is fantastic. I use it for solo work (everything can be exported to PDF where necessary) and also as a shared workspace for collaboration as well. It is super easy to make charts / diagrams and is the closest thing to "whiteboarding" with remote colleagues. It also offers tons of tech-related templates out of the box so you don't have to start with a blank canvas.
it's a bit like having a massive clipboard/whiteboard you stick and pin things to, but online -https://www.mural.co/
I use it for work, but tried out using it to DM a homebrew game so I could stick loads of notes to it, keep track of the (handdrawn) map and limit the amount of screen tab jumping I was having to do!
Here's a (deliberately zoomed out- don't want the players to get too much info!) screenshot of my keeper screen. I have my "episodes" on a separate one in similar way https://drive.google.com/file/d/1sHl74Cz5IdqStysqQ2DzT2HV5iEGn8ys/view?usp=sharing
I really like https://miro.com/ and https://www.mural.co/.
They have very similar features, such as customizable boards, voting, timers, etc.
My team started on Miro and moved to Mural and we’ve been really happy with both.
I would probably look at MURAL.
While it is not specifically a tool for this process, it is built to facilitate remote collaboration in a format as close to white boarding as it can be. It should be more than enough for something as simple to visualize as this. It also has a Google Drive integration.
On your Figma note, it would be very easy to create a master component with some scaling constraints that would let you drop in and resize an arrow on the fly. This also has the pro of allowing you to move into the design in the same document you are white boarding in.