Mulah App

Mulah App

One Platform. Every Financial Move.

One Platform.
Every Financial Move.

Mulah is an all-in-one finance app designed to help users budget, save, send money, and manage their financial lives in one simple place.

Mulah is an all-in-one finance app designed to help users budget, save, send money, and manage their financial lives in one simple place.

Client

CareerFoundry

Services

Visual Design
UI & UX Design

Industries

Finance

Date

October 2024

Client

CareerFoundry

Services

Visual Design
UI & UX Design

Industries

Finance

Date

October 2025

The Problem



Managing personal finances is overwhelming—especially when tools are scattered.


How might we make managing personal finances easier and more accessible for people at any stage of their financial journey?

The Problem


Managing personal finances is overwhelming—especially when tools are scattered.


How might we make managing personal finances easier and more accessible for people at any stage of their financial journey?

The Solution



One Platform. Every Financial Move.


Create a responsive web app that makes personal finance feel approachable and actionable—providing an intuitive and engaging experience.

The Solution


One Platform. Every Financial Move.


Create a responsive web app that makes personal finance feel approachable and actionable—providing an intuitive and engaging experience.

Consolidation is Key.


• Access and manage all desired financial account summaries in one place.

• Keep track of your upcoming paycheck and custom budget.

• Allows users to access their credit reports from TransUnion, Experian and Equifax.

Consolidation is Key.


• Access and manage all desired financial account summaries in one place.

• Keep track of your upcoming paycheck and custom budget.

• Allows users to access their credit reports from TransUnion, Experian and Equifax.

The Main Insight



All participants have an organizational system for money.


Based on the common trends in my affinity map, it became clear that all the participants had the same approach and experience when managing their finances. All participants needed to sign-in to multiple apps to collect the necessary data to check their financial standing.

Design


Roadblocks + a new approach to a better solution.


Initially, I spent a week trying to decide which of the following approaches to streamlining financial management was most effective: AI financial chat bot assistance, in-app educational microcontent, or a personalized financial health dashboard. Ultimately, I chose the dashboard because it best supports the goal of consolidating and simplifying how users interact with their money while letting users feel in control.

Improvements


3 major design improvements



Based on various feedback from my tutor, mentor, peers, and participants I constantly iterated my design over the span of 2 months, with the following major improvements:

Simplicity Powers Control.


• Send or request money instantly with the tap of a few buttons thanks to a streamlined interface.


• Security through instant confirmation: with real-time send/request confirmations.

• Save frequent contacts to your Favorites for faster sending.

Understanding Builds Confidence.


• Access and manage all desired financial account summaries in one place.

• Keep track of your upcoming paycheck and custom budget.

• Allows users to access their credit reports from TransUnion, Experian and Equifax.

The Final Product

Design with Figma


Mulah UI Style Guide


A complete component library focused on maintaining visual consistency and streamlining the interface accross Mulah's design system.

Competitive Analysis


The competition lacks consolidating aspects.


I kick started my research with a competitive analysis of 4 popular apps that aimed to help users manage their finances. It quickly became clear that while each app addressed parts of financial management, none offered a truly all-in-one seamless experience. This discovery became the foundation for my proposed solution.

User Personas


In this case study, I developed detailed user personas of Maria and Jeremy to better understand the target audience, align design decisions with real needs, and guide the overall user experience strategy..

User Flow Charts


In this case study, I developed detailed user personas of Maria and Jeremy to better understand the target audience, align design decisions with real needs, and guide the overall user experience strategy..

User Interviews



Interviews revealed a clear opportunity to reduce the time users spend managing money.


After initial research, I concluded that a deep-dive needed to occur to really gather insights on user behaviors, emotions, and thoughts. This led me to conduct my first round of user interviews with three participants at different levels of financial expertise. I’ve asked them the questions below to pinpoint common frictions, trends, frustrations, and methods to money management.



Research Questions:


  1. How do you manage your finances?

  1. How do you feel about the current tools or resources you use for financial management?

  1. What challenges do you face when organizing your finances? Why?

  1. In what ways do you think money management could be improved for you?

  1. How do you typically handle unexpected expenses?

Simplicity Powers Control.


• Send or request money instantly with the tap of a few buttons thanks to a streamlined interface.


• Security through instant confirmation: with real-time send/request confirmations.

• Save frequent contacts to your Favorites for faster sending.

Understanding Builds Confidence.


• Access and manage all desired financial account summaries in one place.

• Keep track of your upcoming paycheck and custom budget.

• Allows users to access their credit reports from TransUnion, Experian and Equifax.

Competitive Analysis



The competition lacks consolidating aspects.


I kick started my research with a competitive analysis of 4 popular apps that aimed to help users manage their finances. It quickly became clear that while each app addressed parts of financial management, none offered a truly all-in-one seamless experience. This discovery became the foundation for my proposed solution.

User Personas


In this case study, I developed detailed user personas of Maria and Jeremy to better understand the target audience, align design decisions with real needs, and guide the overall user experience strategy..

User Flow Charts


In this case study, I developed detailed user personas of Maria and Jeremy to better understand the target audience, align design decisions with real needs, and guide the overall user experience strategy..

User Interviews



Interviews revealed a clear opportunity to reduce the time users spend managing money.


After initial research, I concluded that a deep-dive needed to occur to really gather insights on user behaviors, emotions, and thoughts. This led me to conduct my first round of user interviews with three participants at different levels of financial expertise. I’ve asked them the questions below to pinpoint common frictions, trends, frustrations, and methods to money management.



Research Questions:


  1. How do you manage your finances?

  1. How do you feel about the current tools or resources you use for financial management?

  1. What challenges do you face when organizing your finances? Why?

  1. In what ways do you think money management could be improved for you?

  1. How do you typically handle unexpected expenses?

The Main Insight



All participants have an organizational system for money.


Based on the common trends in my affinity map, it became clear that all the participants had the same approach and experience when managing their finances. All participants needed to sign-in to multiple apps to collect the necessary data to check their financial standing.

Design


Roadblocks + a new approach to a better solution.


Initially, I spent a week trying to decide which of the following approaches to streamlining financial management was most effective: AI financial chat bot assistance, in-app educational microcontent, or a personalized financial health dashboard. Ultimately, I chose the dashboard because it best supports the goal of consolidating and simplifying how users interact with their money while letting users feel in control.

User Testing


Usability Test Report


Initially, I spent a week trying to decide which of the following approaches to streamlining financial management was most effective: AI financial chat bot assistance, in-app educational microcontent, or a personalized financial health dashboard. Ultimately, I chose the dashboard because it best supports the goal of consolidating and simplifying how users interact with their money while letting users feel in control.tting users feel in control.

Improvements



3 major design improvements


Based on various feedback from my tutor, mentor, peers, and participants I constantly iterated my design over the span of 2 months, with the following major improvements:

User Testing



Usability Test Report


Initially, I spent a week trying to decide which of the following approaches to streamlining financial management was most effective: AI financial chat bot assistance, in-app educational microcontent, or a personalized financial health dashboard. Ultimately, I chose the dashboard because it best supports the goal of consolidating and simplifying how users interact with their money while letting users feel in control.

Conclusion + Reflection



What I'd do differently next time.



This was my first full-cycle UX project, where I had the opportunity to explore the complete design process. I genuinely loved the UX design process—from research to prototyping. This experience has made me even more excited to learning and growing in the field. On that note, here are a few things I’ve learned:



  1. User research is the foundation of a successful design. Though I spent a good amount of time gathering qualitative and quantitative data, I’d dedicate even more time to early-stage research to ensure the design truly reflects a range of user needs and pain points. Looking back, I would invest additional time in conducting broader and more diverse interviews, with sharper interview questions to uncover deeper insights.


  1. Constant iteration is key. Although I made multiple iterations throughout the entire design thinking process, looking back at the project I would have liked to see more of a growth in UI development, showing significant improvement. Keeping in mind WCAG standards and Nielsens 10 usability heuristic guidelines that I’ve learned, I can now spend less time making sure the app meets design standards, and more time on user-centered design reflection.


  1. Sketch first, stress later. In the beginning of the iteration process, I found myself overthinking every design choice. Later in the design process I realized these design choices were fine-tuned, which made me realize more time was spent than needed during the early stages of iteration.

The Final Product

Design with Figma



Mulah UI Style Guide


A complete component library focused on maintaining visual consistency and streamlining the interface accross Mulah's design system.

Conclusion + Reflection



What I'd do differently next time.



This was my first full-cycle UX project, where I had the opportunity to explore the complete design process. I genuinely loved the UX design process—from research to prototyping. This experience has made me even more excited to learning and growing in the field. On that note, here are a few things I’ve learned:



  1. User research is the foundation of a successful design. Though I spent a good amount of time gathering qualitative and quantitative data, I’d dedicate even more time to early-stage research to ensure the design truly reflects a range of user needs and pain points. Looking back, I would invest additional time in conducting broader and more diverse interviews, with sharper interview questions to uncover deeper insights.


  1. Constant iteration is key. Although I made multiple iterations throughout the entire design thinking process, looking back at the project I would have liked to see more of a growth in UI development, showing significant improvement. Keeping in mind WCAG standards and Nielsens 10 usability heuristic guidelines that I’ve learned, I can now spend less time making sure the app meets design standards, and more time on user-centered design reflection.


  1. Sketch first, stress later. In the beginning of the iteration process, I found myself overthinking every design choice. Later in the design process I realized these design choices were fine-tuned, which made me realize more time was spent than needed during the early stages of iteration.

Designing with insights gained from real world experience. Discover more in my resumé below.

EXPLORE

Designing with insights gained from real world experience. Discover more in my resumé below.

EXPLORE

Designing with insights gained from real world experience. Discover more in my resumé below.

EXPLORE