
OYNA
Overview
OYNA, formerly known as Twin Cities Adventure Play, is a community organization that strives to bring play back to life. It is their mission to bring nature-based, self-led play into the lives of every child. They do this by partnering with organizations, schools, and neighborhoods to create spaces where kids can come together to play and build creatively. In addition to this service, OYNA also offers a variety of other services and products all in hopes to bring play back to life and achieve wellness through play.
Due to COVID-19 constraints, many of these product offerings have been put on hold or canceled. OYNA is struggling to clearly communicate its product offerings in an engaging way. I was hired as a UX Designer to strategize a multi-touchpoint strategy to help users identify which products are most relevant and meaningful to them.
Role: UX Designer
Tools: InVision, Pen & Paper, Sketch, Canva, Keynote
Methods: Deep Dive, Comparative Analysis, Secondary Research, Contextual Inquiry, Concept Evaluations, Low to High-Fidelity Prototyping, Affinity Diagramming, and Multi-Touchpoint Strategy Map
Design Cycle

Stakeholder Interview
The stakeholder interview was held via a Zoom call. The goal of the interview was to uncover the goals of the organization and understand current pain points. From the interview, it was gathered that there is a need for organization with the many different products OYNA offers and a need for a clear communication strategy to engage connected and unconnected users.
Deep Dive
I approached the next phase of my research as a review of secondary research which turned into a competitive analysis of the border landscape which then turned into a deep dive where I laid out my findings from both methods side by side. Insights I gathered from the deep dive were, many other organizations are utilizing digital platforms to market themselves and have created virtual spaces to engage with their users.
Touchpoint Strategy Map
From the stakeholder interview and deep dive, I started the next phase of my research with a strategy map of OYNA’s current state touchpoint journey. The creation of this map allowed me to visually see how the current touchpoints fit together as well as visually see where users are not being engaged as derived from my initial research. This disconnect is indicated with the red slashes.
In Process Work for Map
From the initial strategy map, I created a strategy statement to help guide my ongoing work:
“All user experience touchpoints for OYNA will help families identify meaningful and relevant product offerings so that they are able to connect and engage with their family. We will do this by effectively communicating OYNA’s product offerings and drafting meaningful content that communicates the value of OYNA’s products. As a result, we hope to see an increase in engagement and improved connectivity among families.”
Touchpoint Prototypes
After my strategy statement was created, I moved on to prototyping out the social media, website, email, and family recess deck touchpoints. For my prototypes, I focused heavily on the content that would go into those touchpoints so that later on in my concept evaluations, I would be able to evaluate its resonance with users.
Social Media Touchpoint
Low-Fidelity Prototype
Mid-Fidelity Prototype
Website - Landing Page Touchpoint
Low-Fidelity Prototypes
Mid-Fidelity Prototype
Email Series Touchpoint
*Specifically for the email touchpoint, the client expressed an interest in an email series. This is reflected in the prototype.
Low-Fidelity Prototype
High-Fidelity Prototype
Low-Fidelity Prototype
High-Fidelity Prototype
Family Recess Decks Prototype
Low-Fidelity Prototype
Mid-Fidelity Prototype
Concept Evaluations
Following the drafts of my initial prototypes, I took them out into the wild to evaluate with users. All concept evaluations were conducted via a Zoom call and lasted approximately 30 minutes.
Synthesis
Transferred notes to an InVision board:
Affinity Diagram Data:
*I pinned the goals from the concept evaluations to help guide my diagramming.
Key Insights:
Users are interested in hands-on, non-digital engagements that will benefit their child’s development.
Users found the visuals and the playful nature of OYNA’s brand to be engaging but were not able to grasp the value of OYNA.
Users are also highly engaged on social platforms and will sign up for email communication and share content and services they personally enjoy.
Key Touchpoints:
In the stakeholder interview, the stakeholder expressed an interest in email sequencing to communicate with users. Since users are interested in hands-on, non-digital engagements, one of my touchpoints will be focused on the email sequence and how that can be used to communicate OYNA’s Family Recess game deck as it is hands-on and non-digital. This series of emails can be used to showcase to families how Family Recess can benefit a child’s development.
Another touchpoint I choose to focus on was the landing page of the website. Many users did not grasp the value of OYNA. Users expressed how they wanted to be able to tell right away how this organization is different and the benefit of it.
Include pronunciation of OYNA
Include testimonials
Keep visuals
The final touchpoint I decided to focus on was a platform where users can easily share content. In the stakeholder interview, the stakeholder expressed an interest in Kajabi. The addition of a community forum and a space to be able to share content will allow users access to OYNA’s knowledge and services. Users expressed the likelihood of sharing content or services they enjoy and creating a platform to allow sharing will give users accessible material and content to share.
Revised Touchpoint Strategy Map
After I gathered key insights from my research, I really got to thinking about how I can start connecting the various touchpoints users experience as well as add on to that experience to create a more holistic approach. This led me to revise the strategy map. The revised touchpoint strategy map showcases the awareness phase through the advocacy phase of a user’s interactions with OYNA. It is a visualization of how the current and additional interaction points fit together to start creating a cohesive journey for OYNA’s users. Along each of these phases, you can see the corresponding activity the user is performing and the user’s corresponding goal in that phase which were derived from my concept evaluations.
Revised strategy statement:
“All user experience touchpoints for OYNA will help families identify hands-on and non-digital product offerings so that they are able to connect and engage with their family and community. We will do this by effectively communicating OYNA’s product offerings and drafting meaningful content that communicates the value of OYNA’s products. As a result, we hope to see an increase in engagement and improved connectivity among families.”
Annotated Prototypes
With a revised touchpoint strategy map, I shifted my focus to revising and adding to my prototypes to include annotations. Please see below for select annotated prototypes:
*NOTE: Due to the size of the annotated prototypes PDF file, the file had to be reduced to be hosted on Squarespace, which decreased its fidelity a bit. For a more high-fidelity version, please contact me.
Check out my final presentation for this project!

Summary
I wanted to learn more about UX strategy and working with OYNA really allowed me to be able to explore it in more depth. Something I learned while working on this project is that content is very much part of a design as are visuals, colors, flow, and etc. One of the biggest challenges I had with this project was initial participant recruitment. When I was planning my scope of work for the client, I had initially planned to have two rounds of user research sessions (one after the deep dive and another one to evaluate my concepts). However, I was unable to secure participants for the first round due to the pace of the project and participant unavailability. I had to get scrappy and dive further into the stakeholder interview and the deep dive to inform my initial prototypes. I also earned to strategize a bit more to secure users for the concept evaluations and was able to get comprehensive data to inform the rest of my designs. I would have created personas to help guide my strategy statement and the rest of my work had I been able to secure users for the first round of interviews.
Be curious.
Keep dreaming.