Behind the Build: Designing for a SaaS Product Launch
Monday, May 19, 2025

Behind the Build: Designing for a SaaS Product Launch
Written by
CEO
How we approached UX, speed, and scalability in Sonar’s new digital experience.

Launching a SaaS product is more than building features. It's about designing an experience that feels intuitive, trustworthy, and scalable from day one. In this article, we’ll share how we approached the UX and visual design for a recent SaaS client — turning raw functionality into a refined, user-driven product ready for market.
1. Understanding the User and the Business Model
Every great design project starts with clarity. We began by working closely with the founders to understand:
What the product does
Who it's for
What success looks like in the first 6–12 months
We mapped out user journeys across multiple roles — from first-time users to admins — while keeping in mind how onboarding, conversion, and retention would flow into their freemium-to-paid model.
Key questions we asked:
What’s the user’s first “aha” moment?
Where could friction derail adoption?
How do we keep things simple without dumbing it down?
This strategic foundation shaped every design decision that followed.
2. Building the Design System
With the user journey mapped out, we moved into interface design. Our goal was to keep the product intuitive and fast while giving it a modern, tech-forward feel.
We created a modular design system in Figma that included:
Typography and color hierarchy
UI components (buttons, inputs, tabs, dropdowns, etc.)
Iconography and illustration styles
Light and dark mode options
Spacing rules for consistency across breakpoints
Having a clear, scalable system made it easier to move quickly — and easier for developers to implement with confidence.
3. Designing the Dashboard and Key Screens
Dashboards are tricky. They need to show just enough data to be helpful, but not so much that they overwhelm the user.
We started with wireframes and low-fidelity flows to structure:
The onboarding experience
Dashboard widgets and layout
Navigation and filtering logic
Mobile vs desktop considerations
Once the wireframes were solid, we moved into high-fidelity UI — balancing clarity with character. We added just enough visual polish (microinteractions, hover states, subtle shadows) to make the app feel smooth and responsive without distracting from usability.
4. Final Touches Before Launch
In the final weeks before launch, we worked closely with the development team to ensure consistency across the build. This included:
Annotated Figma files with dev-ready notes
Responsive behavior specifications
States for error, loading, and empty screens
Performance recommendations (for images, icon loading, animations)
We also designed the marketing site landing page, making sure the brand and product visuals aligned.
Conclusion
Designing for a SaaS product launch isn’t just about making things look good — it’s about clarity, consistency, and creating an experience that earns trust from the first click.
If you’re launching a product and need help turning strategy into a scalable interface, we’d love to help.
Behind the Build: Designing for a SaaS Product Launch
Monday, May 19, 2025

Behind the Build: Designing for a SaaS Product Launch
Written by
CEO
How we approached UX, speed, and scalability in Sonar’s new digital experience.

Launching a SaaS product is more than building features. It's about designing an experience that feels intuitive, trustworthy, and scalable from day one. In this article, we’ll share how we approached the UX and visual design for a recent SaaS client — turning raw functionality into a refined, user-driven product ready for market.
1. Understanding the User and the Business Model
Every great design project starts with clarity. We began by working closely with the founders to understand:
What the product does
Who it's for
What success looks like in the first 6–12 months
We mapped out user journeys across multiple roles — from first-time users to admins — while keeping in mind how onboarding, conversion, and retention would flow into their freemium-to-paid model.
Key questions we asked:
What’s the user’s first “aha” moment?
Where could friction derail adoption?
How do we keep things simple without dumbing it down?
This strategic foundation shaped every design decision that followed.
2. Building the Design System
With the user journey mapped out, we moved into interface design. Our goal was to keep the product intuitive and fast while giving it a modern, tech-forward feel.
We created a modular design system in Figma that included:
Typography and color hierarchy
UI components (buttons, inputs, tabs, dropdowns, etc.)
Iconography and illustration styles
Light and dark mode options
Spacing rules for consistency across breakpoints
Having a clear, scalable system made it easier to move quickly — and easier for developers to implement with confidence.
3. Designing the Dashboard and Key Screens
Dashboards are tricky. They need to show just enough data to be helpful, but not so much that they overwhelm the user.
We started with wireframes and low-fidelity flows to structure:
The onboarding experience
Dashboard widgets and layout
Navigation and filtering logic
Mobile vs desktop considerations
Once the wireframes were solid, we moved into high-fidelity UI — balancing clarity with character. We added just enough visual polish (microinteractions, hover states, subtle shadows) to make the app feel smooth and responsive without distracting from usability.
4. Final Touches Before Launch
In the final weeks before launch, we worked closely with the development team to ensure consistency across the build. This included:
Annotated Figma files with dev-ready notes
Responsive behavior specifications
States for error, loading, and empty screens
Performance recommendations (for images, icon loading, animations)
We also designed the marketing site landing page, making sure the brand and product visuals aligned.
Conclusion
Designing for a SaaS product launch isn’t just about making things look good — it’s about clarity, consistency, and creating an experience that earns trust from the first click.
If you’re launching a product and need help turning strategy into a scalable interface, we’d love to help.
Behind the Build: Designing for a SaaS Product Launch
Monday, May 19, 2025

Behind the Build: Designing for a SaaS Product Launch
Written by
CEO
How we approached UX, speed, and scalability in Sonar’s new digital experience.

Launching a SaaS product is more than building features. It's about designing an experience that feels intuitive, trustworthy, and scalable from day one. In this article, we’ll share how we approached the UX and visual design for a recent SaaS client — turning raw functionality into a refined, user-driven product ready for market.
1. Understanding the User and the Business Model
Every great design project starts with clarity. We began by working closely with the founders to understand:
What the product does
Who it's for
What success looks like in the first 6–12 months
We mapped out user journeys across multiple roles — from first-time users to admins — while keeping in mind how onboarding, conversion, and retention would flow into their freemium-to-paid model.
Key questions we asked:
What’s the user’s first “aha” moment?
Where could friction derail adoption?
How do we keep things simple without dumbing it down?
This strategic foundation shaped every design decision that followed.
2. Building the Design System
With the user journey mapped out, we moved into interface design. Our goal was to keep the product intuitive and fast while giving it a modern, tech-forward feel.
We created a modular design system in Figma that included:
Typography and color hierarchy
UI components (buttons, inputs, tabs, dropdowns, etc.)
Iconography and illustration styles
Light and dark mode options
Spacing rules for consistency across breakpoints
Having a clear, scalable system made it easier to move quickly — and easier for developers to implement with confidence.
3. Designing the Dashboard and Key Screens
Dashboards are tricky. They need to show just enough data to be helpful, but not so much that they overwhelm the user.
We started with wireframes and low-fidelity flows to structure:
The onboarding experience
Dashboard widgets and layout
Navigation and filtering logic
Mobile vs desktop considerations
Once the wireframes were solid, we moved into high-fidelity UI — balancing clarity with character. We added just enough visual polish (microinteractions, hover states, subtle shadows) to make the app feel smooth and responsive without distracting from usability.
4. Final Touches Before Launch
In the final weeks before launch, we worked closely with the development team to ensure consistency across the build. This included:
Annotated Figma files with dev-ready notes
Responsive behavior specifications
States for error, loading, and empty screens
Performance recommendations (for images, icon loading, animations)
We also designed the marketing site landing page, making sure the brand and product visuals aligned.
Conclusion
Designing for a SaaS product launch isn’t just about making things look good — it’s about clarity, consistency, and creating an experience that earns trust from the first click.
If you’re launching a product and need help turning strategy into a scalable interface, we’d love to help.
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We transform brands.
Your success is next.
Start your project now by booking a one-on-one consultation with our expert.
Meet the partners who are part of our success story

We transform brands.
Your success is next.
Start your project now by booking a one-on-one consultation with our expert.
Meet the partners who are part of our success story
