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UX/UI Design
Website Redesign
Design for America · UCSD
Habitat for Humanity

Bridging Habitat for Humanity's mission with a clearer path to local community action.

Habitat for Humanity redesign — Opportunities Near You screen
Role
UX/UI Designer
Team
Jiho Oh
Jamie Lim
Tools
Figma
Timeline
12 Weeks
Oct 2025 – Jan 2026

Habitat for Humanity is a global nonprofit organization dedicated to building safe, affordable housing through community partnership and volunteer-driven projects.

Their website connects volunteers with local build projects. However, users struggle to find and register for nearby volunteer opportunities due to fragmented navigation, early account requirements, and unclear feedback after sign-up.

This redesign focused on creating a clear, local-first, low-friction volunteering experience while modernizing the site's visual system and homepage structure.

Jump to prototypes ↓
The Problem

Users experienced difficulty discovering and committing to local volunteer opportunities.

We began with initial user research to understand how volunteers search for opportunities and what barriers prevent them from signing up.

We conducted a survey focused specifically on the current Habitat website. Participants were asked about their experience finding volunteer opportunities, clarity of navigation, and whether they felt confident committing to events through the platform.

While many participants described the website as informative and trustworthy, several noted that the interface felt visually overwhelming, with "too many links," "too much going on," and difficulty focusing on specific tasks. We concluded that users have an expectation for a calm, structured experience where primary actions are immediately recognizable.

"On mobile the organization was a little distracting."
"There's too much stuff going on. Too many images, too many elements, too much color."
"I felt like there's a lot going on, and seems a little unorganized."

To expand upon this, I conducted usability testing with 9 participants, giving them the task of signing up for a local volunteer opportunity in San Diego on the existing Habitat website.

Usability testing session

Usability testing session — participants given task on existing Habitat site

After observing their process from start-to-finish and asking for feedback afterwards, these are the results we found.

Initial User Testing Results
Average Completion Time
3 min 6 sec
⚠️
Struggled with task
8 / 9
participants
👤 Participant Feedback
"I had to go back and forth between multiple sections because the titles were not clear at all."
"Just to view the opportunities, you need an account — I didn't like that."
"It doesn't explicitly say anything about volunteering opportunities on the main page."
"Wait, why am I on a different website now?"

From this process, we identified the three main pain points that would guide our redesign.

Navigation is split between national and local affiliate sites.

Volunteering entry points are buried in the site's hierarchy.

Account creation is required just to browse opportunities.

The Process

How can we simplify navigation so volunteers can quickly find and sign up for opportunities?

To start off, we mapped the original end-to-end volunteering journey to identify friction points.

Original Volunteer Journey
Start Home Page Volunteer Nav Menu ZIP Code Entry Nearby Branches Redirect to local site Local Website Volunteer Page First time? Returning Volunteer Opps. First time Sign-up Exit
Redesigned Volunteer Journey
Start Home Page NavBar Scroll Volunteer Page Click Opp. Near You ZIP Code Entry Volunteer Opps. Register ? Yes Event Registration No Exit

To better visualize our redesigned user flow and brainstorm in preparation for our low-fidelity designs, we each made sketches of the updated interface.

Sketches

The sketches I made!

Then, we created lo-fi wireframes to iterate on interaction patterns before visual design.

We combined the best ideas from our sketches into simple wireframes to test layout, navigation, and user flow. This helped us quickly spot problem areas in the volunteer discovery experience and adjust the structure before moving into high-fidelity design.

Scroll to explore the early wireframes!

Building on the lo-fi wireframes, we crafted an interactive high-fidelity prototype.

A clickable prototype was built to simulate the end-to-end volunteer journey, allowing us to test interactions, navigation, and overall usability before finalizing the solution.

Scroll to explore the hi-fi wireframes!

With the prototype in place, we re-tested the same 9 participants to evaluate whether the redesigned experience reduced friction and improved discovery of volunteer opportunities.

Redesign User Testing Results
Average Completion Time
3 min 6 sec41 sec
↓ 78% faster!
Preferred the redesign
9 / 9
participants
👤 Participant Feedback
"I was able to read more about opportunities before deciding where I wanted to volunteer."
"I prefer this one because you didn't have to sign up to view the volunteering opportunities."
"It felt a lot more straightforward because there was less pages to navigate."
"There was less clutter and more organization, I didn't really feel lost at all."

The results confirmed that the redesigned flow significantly reduced friction and improved the discoverability of volunteer opportunities.

We then used participant feedback to make targeted refinements that would improve clarity and confidence in the final prototype.

Before
Users read mission statements but still asked, "So what does Habitat actually do?"
After
We added an impact-summary section that translates the mission into concrete outcomes and scale.
Before
Users lack context about what volunteering involves prior to browsing opportunities.
After
We added a role-preview carousel to clarify typical tasks and expectations before users browse opportunities.
Before
Users had to rely on memory or navigate backward to reconfirm event details.
After
We added a contextual opportunity summary on the side, allowing users to verify event information without leaving the form.
The Solution

The final redesigned experience!

Final redesigned Habitat for Humanity experience
Laptop frame

View the full clickable prototype ↗

Our redesign thoroughly addresses all 3 of the original pain points.

Navigation is split between national and local affiliate sites. ✓ Navigation is contained within a single site.

Volunteering entry points are buried in the site's hierarchy. ✓ Volunteer entry points surface clearly in the primary navigation.

Account creation is required just to browse opportunities. ✓ Users can browse freely without an account.

In addressing these pain points, users reached sign-up 78% faster, and all participants (9/9) indicated greater satisfaction with the redesigned flow.

Reflection

Looking Back & Moving Forward

This was my first end-to-end UX project, from research through prototyping and testing. It showed me how user feedback drives stronger design decisions, and that clarity often matters more than visual polish.

Working in a team taught me to stay flexible when roles shifted and members stepped away, and it showed me how important communication and shared responsibility are in design work.

Me and my team
Me and my team!

So what's next?

  • Design the flow for other kinds of volunteering
  • Conduct more user testing
  • Find non-volunteering related pain points
  • Make the interface mobile-responsive
Mobile interface of redesigned Habitat website
Mobile responsive view