04 · Thoughtworks · Design Leadership

From 8 weeksto 3 weeks.

How I restructured a fractured design team at a Latin American bank — introducing planning, roadmaps, AI automation, and governance — cutting delivery by more than half.

Design LeadershipProcess & OpsBank · NDA

8w → 3w

Delivery cycle

3 designers

Team led

0 → 7

Ceremonies

< 2 months

To Lead role

Client name under NDA.

The situation

No process. No roadmap.No ceremonies. Just fire.

When I joined the project at a major Latin American bank, the design team was operating in pure survival mode. Deliveries took 8 weeks on average. Scope changed constantly mid-sprint. The client was frustrated and trust had eroded completely. There was no planning structure, no roadmap visible to anyone, and no design ceremonies connecting the team.

My goal wasn't to redesign the product. It was to redesign how the team worked — and make the results speak for themselves.

Delivery cycles of 8+ weeks with no predictability
No sprint planning — work was reactive, not intentional
Constant mid-sprint scope changes with no governance
No design roadmap shared with PMs or stakeholders
Skill mismatch inside the team causing bottlenecks
Client trust completely eroded

The headline result

Design delivery cycle
8w
Before
0w
After

More than 60% reduction in delivery cycle — through planning, governance, and a stable sprint structure.

The intervention

Four systems that changed everything.

I didn't just redesign screens. I redesigned how the team planned, communicated, and delivered.

Design workflow — components of our process
The systemThe end-to-end design workflow I introduced — from discovery to handoff, anchored in user-centric design.

01 — Sprint Planning

Planning to eliminate overwork

I introduced structured sprint planning sessions — something the team had never had. Each cycle started with explicit capacity planning: what we could actually commit to, what was out of scope, and what moved to the next sprint. This single change stopped the pattern of constant overload and made delivery predictable for the first time.

Weekly planningCapacity mappingScope protection3-week cadence

02 — Design Roadmap

Roadmap visible to all PMs and stakeholders

I created and maintained the first design roadmap in the project's history — and made it a shared artifact. Every Product Manager could see what design was working on, what was coming next, and how design decisions connected to product delivery. This eliminated the "what is design doing?" friction and turned design into a predictable, strategic partner instead of a reactive service.

Shared with all PMsDelivery milestonesQuarterly viewDesign dependencies
Sprint roadmap — design and dev tracks across 3 phases
The shared sprint roadmap: design and dev tracks running in parallel across three phases, with a continuous discovery track.

Plan de Entregas 2026

Underneath the roadmap sat a granular, quarter-by-quarter delivery Gantt — every design and dev dependency mapped for the year. The detailed plan stays condensed here to respect the client agreement.

Protected under NDA

03 — AI & Design Jira

AI-powered cards to standardize every process

I built a dedicated Design Jira board with AI-generated ticket templates for each design phase. Instead of writing cards from scratch every sprint, the team used structured templates — automatically populated with the right fields, acceptance criteria, and definition of done for that type of task. This standardized how we documented work, reduced back-and-forth with Engineering, and made handoffs predictable and consistent across the entire team.

AI card templates
Auto-populated per design phase
Standardized handoff
Same format every sprint
Engineering alignment
No more ambiguous specs
Design Jira board with AI-generated ticket templates
The dedicated Design Jira board — every card spun up from an AI-generated template per design phase.

04 — 7 Ceremonies

7 alignment spaces where there were zero

I established the full ceremony stack: sprint planning, design critique, usability test review, cross-team alignment with Product and Engineering, weekly client sync, desk checks, and retrospectives. Each ceremony had a clear owner, agenda, and outcome. The 3-week sprint cadence gave everyone — including the client — a rhythm they could count on.

0 → 7
Ceremonies
3-wk
Sprint cadence
Rework
100%
Alignment

Design critique

A recurring ceremony where the team pressure-tested each other's work against user needs — before anything reached handoff.

Protected under NDA
Engineering handoff board
Ready-for-dev handoff — every screen approved, annotated, and linked to its Jira card.

System thinking

From chaos
to clarity.

System-level design board — the full credit flow mapped end to end

The entire credit platform mapped end-to-end on a single board — every flow, state, and dependency in one place.

What I delivered

System thinking,
made visible.

Process artifacts and screen evolution across every stage of the credit platform — benchmark to handoff.

01 · Benchmark

Started by studying
the whole market.

Before a single screen, I benchmarked how leading banks and fintechs structure their credit flows. It became the shared reference point the team measured every later decision against.

Competitive benchmark of lending apps
End-to-end user journey board

02 · User journey

Mapped the full
field-advisor journey.

From client search to credit simulation, transfer and collections — the entire end-to-end journey laid out in one board so every gap and hand-off was visible to the team and the client.

03 · Wireframes

Validated in low-fi,
before any pixel.

Rapid low-fidelity wireframes let us test structure and flow with users early — so we committed to UI only once the underlying experience was proven to work.

Low-fidelity wireframes board
Screen evolution across iterations

04 · Evolution

Every iteration,
documented.

Screen evolution across iterations — each design rationale captured and traceable, so the reasoning behind every change stayed legible long after the decision was made.

Team & people

Built and led a team of 3.

Managing people and the process at the same time — while working in Spanish, not my native language.

Discovery Track

Research, usability testing, future-sprint preparation

Delivery Track

UI design, handoff to Engineering, client alignment

Beyond the workflow split, I led recruitment — personally interviewing and onboarding a third designer — and managed the full transition plan: roll-off for the outgoing designer, onboarding structure for the new hire. All while protecting the account's delivery continuity and maintaining client confidence through the transition.

Results

Team efficiency. Process health.
Client trust rebuilt.

Design delivery cycle

8 weeks3 weeks

Alignment spaces created

0 ceremonies7

Sprint structure

ReactivePlanned

Visibility across all PMs

No roadmapShared roadmap

Jira standardization

Manual cardsAI templates

Client relationship

High conflict100% trust

Delivery cycle reduction

0w
Before
0w
After
0%
Reduction

Recognition

Validated from every direction.

Formally designated Leader of the UX Front and added to the Extended Client Leadership Team — in under two months.

Designated Leader of the UX Front

Formally by delivery principal

Extended Client Leadership Team

Rare for a designer at Senior grade

Consistently Exceeded Expectations

Annual assessment 2025–2026

All negotiations in Spanish

Not my native language — Portuguese

You didn't just identify the chaos — you solved it. The 5-phase plan, the sprint structure, the roadmap — the most important part was how you built it: by involving PMs, Tech Leads, and the client for validation. That isn't the work of an executor; it's the work of a leader.

Mafer EscuderoDelivery Principal · Thoughtworks

Your performance doesn't just meet — it consistently exceeds the expectations of the Senior grade. You are unequivocally operating at a Lead level. Your formal designation as Leader of the UX front is the obvious and deserved recognition of that fact.

Pamela NunezPrincipal PM · Thoughtworks

See it in product

The systems behind
the products.

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