Woman In White Background
Woman In White Background

2025

Livly: A curated live shopping experience powered by creators

Livly: A curated live shopping experience powered by creators

A boutique live shopping app designed around authenticity, calm, and confident discovery.

Information Architecture

User Research

User Testing

Role: UX Researcher and Designer, Information Architect
Project type: Group academic project (4 members)
Timeline: 14 weeks
Tools: Figma, UX metrics

Overview

Live shopping is booming globally—but not in the U.S.

Despite massive investments, American users (especially Gen Z and younger Millennials) still view live shopping as:

Chaotic

pressure tactics, auction-style shouting

Untrustworthy

unknown sellers, unclear authenticity

Overwhelming

busy UI, fast chat, unclear product info

Low-quality

videos but no photos, lack of curation

Yet this same audience lives on influencer-driven platforms like TikTok, Instagram, and YouTube—where curated, personality-driven content drives their purchasing decisions every day.

Opportunity

Opportunity

There is no platform that treats influencers as curated, trustworthy hosts and live shopping as an elevated, boutique, editorial experience.

Livly fills this gap.

Defining The Core Problem

Defining The Core Problem

The redesign was guided by research and focused on clarity, trust, and brand alignment through six key initiatives:

User Research

User Research

  1. Competitive Analysis

What are other live shopping apps doing to:

  • Help sellers connect and interact with their buyers?

  • Navigate users through hundreds of live events and products?

  • Balance functionality and aesthetic?

What are they doing right? Doing wrong? How can we do better?

  1. Learning About Our Users

6 Structured Interviews

(20–30 mins each)

2 Interview Scripts

(live shoppers + online shoppers)

15 Survey responses

collected over Goole forms

Affinity diagramming

to gather insights

Partcipant Demographics:

26-29 years old

Women

NYC/NJ based

Tech-savvy online shoppers whose fashion and lifestyle choices are influenced by digital creators.

67%

have watched live shopping events

33%

have purchased something from live shopping events

User Persona

  1. What Do Users Want

Trust Is Non-Negotiable

Users won’t engage or purchase without confidence in the platform, hosts, and products.

Avoid High-Pressure Selling

Users prefer excitement without stress or aggressive sales tactics.

Provide Clear Product Transparency

Users need reliable details like zoom-ins, replays, stills, reviews, and ratings before buying.

Deliver Relevant Guidance in Real Time

Users expect tailored recommendations and quick answers to their questions during live sessions.

Create a Premium,
Calm Experience

Users want an authentic, relationship-driven environment—not a chaotic one.


Leverage Influencer Connection

Users enjoy discovering products through creators they genuinely relate to.

Organising the Information

Organising the Information

Information Architecture

We performed card sorting + tree testing to understand how users mentally group:

products, influencers, live interactions, seller credibility, shopping actions

What emerged:

Users weigh influencers and products equally when deciding what to explore next.
This shaped our final IA.

BEFORE

We’re on the right path for creating groups of information related to product details, interaction features, and seller information

Home

Curated

event lists

Curated

product lists

Discover

Browse live events

by influencer

Browse live events

by product category

+

AFTER

AFTER

We’re on the right path for creating groups of information related to product details, interaction features, and seller information

For You

Curated

event lists

Curated

product lists

Influencers

Home

List of influencers

Browse live events

by product category

Categories

Design

Design

Low-Fi Prototyping

We started with sketches and designed a lo-fi prototype using our sitemap, ready for user testing

Evaluation

Evaluation


6 moderated user interviews.

1 task-based script

Three core flows:
  1. Discover & purchase from a live event

  2. Verify seller/influencer trustworthiness

  3. Explore influencer’s full product range Livly Evaluation Results

Users liked: 
  1. Simplicity of layout

  2. Clear navigation

  3. Seller metrics and reviews

  4. Product information

  5. AI assistant

Users didn’t like/were confused by: 
  1. Live event icons

  2. ‘Your Edit’ tab and other content

  3. Lack of stock indicators

  4. No way to search through store

  5. Missing chat on screen

Iterations

Iterations

Some Key Design Decisions

#1 All-in-one home page

User Research:
Users wanted a personalised feed but also the flexibility to browse creators or categories.

Lo-Fi Concept:
Introduced a home page with three tabs: Your Edit, Influencers, and Categories—defaulting to personalised content.

User Testing:
The label Your Edit implied users could customise the feed themselves. Additionally, tapping Influencers took users directly to live events, but they expected a list of creators first.

Final Decision:

Renamed Your Edit to For You and redesigned Influencers to show a list of creators instead of immediately opening live events.

User Research:
Users wanted a personalised feed but also the flexibility to browse creators or categories.

Lo-Fi Concept:
Introduced a home page with three tabs: Your Edit, Influencers, and Categories—defaulting to personalised content.

User Testing:
The label Your Edit implied users could customise the feed themselves. Additionally, tapping Influencers took users directly to live events, but they expected a list of creators first.

Final Decision:

Renamed Your Edit to For You and redesigned Influencers to show a list of creators instead of immediately opening live events.

Lo-Fi Concept

Influencers tab with live events

Revised Influencer Tab

#2 Engaging but unchaotic simple Live Screen

User Research:
Users wanted quick-access features (comment, like, share, promos, save, product lineup) while avoiding a chaotic, chat-heavy live screen.

Lo-Fi Concept:
Added all requested features and nested the live chat to reduce clutter.

User Testing:
Too many icons led to confusion: the heart icon was interpreted as a wishlist, the save icon felt redundant, and the share icon resembled an upload action. Additionally, fully hiding the chat reduced user engagement.

Final Decision:

Removed redundant icons and kept only essential actions. Displayed one recent chat bubble on-screen while nesting the full chat in the comment icon.

Lo-Fi Concept

After User Testing

Final Prototype

#3 Add to Cart / Buy Now

User Research:
Users preferred a calm, non-pressured shopping experience and felt on-the-spot bidding was stressful.

Lo-Fi Concept:
Replaced bidding with prominent “Add to Cart” and “Buy Now” sticky buttons on the product details page.

User Testing:
This approach was validated—users responded positively to the simplified purchase flow.

Final Decision:
Implemented the two-button purchase model to support a more relaxed shopping experience.

No Live Bidding on Live Event

Sticky

Add to Cart/Buy Now

#4 Transparency via metrics & reviews

User Research:
Users relied heavily on trust signals and wanted clarity on seller credibility before purchasing.

Lo-Fi Concept:

Introduced seller metrics such as ratings, past performance, and key stats, along with user reviews.

User Testing and Final Decision
Users found these indicators helpful which validated our design

Customer Reviews

Seller Metrics

Seller Reviews

#5 AI Assistant Integration

User Research:
Users struggled to interact with sellers during busy live sessions, especially for returns and refund-related questions.

Lo-Fi Concept:
Added an AI assistant on the live screen that could summarise key information and answer common queries.

User Testing & Final Decision:
Users appreciated the feature, validating its inclusion as a support layer during live shopping.

Home

Live Event

Product Details

The Result

The Result

A premium, calm, curated live shopping experience


  • Strong emphasis on influencers as trusted curators, not sales agents

  • Clear, structured product details to reduce anxiety

  • Trust signals integrated across seller and influencer profiles

A final high-fidelity prototype that users described as:“so clean,” “trustworthy,” “like a boutique I want to shop from.”

Market Gap Solved

Livly fills the void between:


TikTok aesthetics × Nordstrom product trust × real-time influencer connection.

More Works

More Works

Overview

Role: UX Researcher and Designer, Information Architect
Project type: Group academic project (4 members)
Timeline: 14 weeks
Tools: Figma, UX metrics

Chaotic

pressure tactics, auction-style shouting

Untrustworthy

unknown sellers, unclear authenticity

Overwhelming

busy UI, fast chat, unclear product info

Low-quality

videos but no photos, lack of curation

Yet this same audience lives on influencer-driven platforms like TikTok, Instagram, and YouTube—where curated, personality-driven content drives their purchasing decisions every day.

Opportunity

There is no platform that treats influencers as curated, trustworthy hosts and live shopping as an elevated, boutique, editorial experience.

Livly fills this gap.

Defining The Core Problem

The redesign was guided by research and focused on clarity, trust, and brand alignment through six key initiatives:

User Research

  1. Competitive Analysis

What are other live shopping apps doing to:

  • Help sellers connect and interact with their buyers?

  • Navigate users through hundreds of live events and products?

  • Balance functionality and aesthetic?

What are they doing right? Doing wrong? How can we do better?

  1. Learning About Our Users

6 Structured Interviews

(20–30 mins each)

2 Interview Scripts

(live shoppers + online shoppers)

15 Survey responses

collected over Goole forms

Affinity diagramming

to gather insights

Partcipant Demographics:

26-29 years old

Women

NYC/NJ based

Tech-savvy online shoppers whose fashion and lifestyle choices are influenced by digital creators.

67%

have watched live shopping events

33%

have purchased something from live shopping events

User Persona

  1. What Do Users Want

Trust Is Non-Negotiable

Users won’t engage or purchase without confidence in the platform, hosts, and products.

Avoid High-Pressure Selling

Users prefer excitement without stress or aggressive sales tactics.

Provide Clear Product Transparency

Users need reliable details like zoom-ins, replays, stills, reviews, and ratings before buying.

Deliver Relevant Guidance in Real Time

Users expect tailored recommendations and quick answers to their questions during live sessions.

Create a Premium,
Calm Experience

Users want an authentic, relationship-driven environment—not a chaotic one.


Leverage Influencer Connection

Users enjoy discovering products through creators they genuinely relate to.

Organising the Information

Information Architecture

We performed card sorting + tree testing to understand how users mentally group:

products, influencers, live interactions, seller credibility, shopping actions

What emerged:

Users weigh influencers and products equally when deciding what to explore next.
This shaped our final IA.

BEFORE

We’re on the right path for creating groups of information related to product details, interaction features, and seller information

AFTER

We’re on the right path for creating groups of information related to product details, interaction features, and seller information

Design

Low-Fi Prototyping

We started with sketches and designed a lo-fi prototype using our sitemap, ready for user testing

Evaluation


6 moderated user interviews.

1 task-based script

Three core flows:
  1. Discover & purchase from a live event

  2. Verify seller/influencer trustworthiness

  3. Explore influencer’s full product range Livly Evaluation Results

Users liked: 
  1. Simplicity of layout

  2. Clear navigation

  3. Seller metrics and reviews

  4. Product information

  5. AI assistant

Users didn’t like/were confused by: 
  1. Live event icons

  2. ‘Your Edit’ tab and other content

  3. Lack of stock indicators

  4. No way to search through store

  5. Missing chat on screen

Iterations

Some Key Design Decisions

#1 All-in-one home page

User Research:
Users wanted a personalised feed but also the flexibility to browse creators or categories.

Lo-Fi Concept:
Introduced a home page with three tabs: Your Edit, Influencers, and Categories—defaulting to personalised content.

User Testing:
The label Your Edit implied users could customise the feed themselves. Additionally, tapping Influencers took users directly to live events, but they expected a list of creators first.

Final Decision:

Renamed Your Edit to For You and redesigned Influencers to show a list of creators instead of immediately opening live events.

Lo-Fi Concept

Influencers tab with live events

Revised Influencer Tab

#2 Engaging but unchaotic simple Live Screen

User Research:
Users wanted quick-access features (comment, like, share, promos, save, product lineup) while avoiding a chaotic, chat-heavy live screen.

Lo-Fi Concept:
Added all requested features and nested the live chat to reduce clutter.

User Testing:
Too many icons led to confusion: the heart icon was interpreted as a wishlist, the save icon felt redundant, and the share icon resembled an upload action. Additionally, fully hiding the chat reduced user engagement.

Final Decision:

Removed redundant icons and kept only essential actions. Displayed one recent chat bubble on-screen while nesting the full chat in the comment icon.

Lo-Fi Concept

After User Testing

Final Prototype

#3 Add to Cart / Buy Now

User Research:
Users preferred a calm, non-pressured shopping experience and felt on-the-spot bidding was stressful.

Lo-Fi Concept:
Replaced bidding with prominent “Add to Cart” and “Buy Now” sticky buttons on the product details page.

User Testing:
This approach was validated—users responded positively to the simplified purchase flow.

Final Decision:
Implemented the two-button purchase model to support a more relaxed shopping experience.

No Live Bidding on Live Event

Sticky

Add to Cart/Buy Now

#4 Transparency via metrics & reviews

User Research:
Users relied heavily on trust signals and wanted clarity on seller credibility before purchasing.

Lo-Fi Concept:

Introduced seller metrics such as ratings, past performance, and key stats, along with user reviews.

User Testing and Final Decision
Users found these indicators helpful which validated our design

Customer Reviews

Seller Metrics

Seller Reviews

#5 AI Assistant Integration

User Research:
Users struggled to interact with sellers during busy live sessions, especially for returns and refund-related questions.

Lo-Fi Concept:
Added an AI assistant on the live screen that could summarise key information and answer common queries.

User Testing & Final Decision:
Users appreciated the feature, validating its inclusion as a support layer during live shopping.

Home

Live Event

Product Details

The Result

The redesign transformed Copper Studio’s website into a modern, trustworthy, and performance-ready platform:

A premium, calm, curated live shopping experience

  • Strong emphasis on influencers as trusted curators, not sales agents

  • Clear, structured product details to reduce anxiety

  • Trust signals integrated across seller and influencer profiles

A final high-fidelity prototype that users described as:“so clean,” “trustworthy,” “like a boutique I want to shop from.”

Market Gap Solved

Livly fills the void between:


TikTok aesthetics × Nordstrom product trust × real-time influencer connection.

More Works

Woman In White Background
Woman In White Background

2025

Livly: A curated live shopping experience powered by creators

A boutique live shopping app designed around authenticity, calm, and confident discovery.

Information Architecture

User Research

User Testing

Role: UX Researcher and Designer, Information Architect
Project type: Group academic project (4 members)
Timeline: 14 weeks
Tools: Figma, UX metrics

Overview

Live shopping is booming globally—but not in the U.S.

Despite massive investments, American users (especially Gen Z and younger Millennials) still view live shopping as:

Chaotic

pressure tactics, auction-style shouting

Untrustworthy

unknown sellers, unclear authenticity

Overwhelming

busy UI, fast chat, unclear product info

Low-quality

videos but no photos, lack of curation

Yet this same audience lives on influencer-driven platforms like TikTok, Instagram, and YouTube—where curated, personality-driven content drives their purchasing decisions every day.

Opportunity

There is no platform that treats influencers as curated, trustworthy hosts and live shopping as an elevated, boutique, editorial experience.

Livly fills this gap.

Defining The Core Problem

The redesign was guided by research and focused on clarity, trust, and brand alignment through six key initiatives:

User Research

  1. Competitive Analysis

What are other live shopping apps doing to:

  • Help sellers connect and interact with their buyers?

  • Navigate users through hundreds of live events and products?

  • Balance functionality and aesthetic?

What are they doing right? Doing wrong? How can we do better?

  1. Learning About Our Users

6 Structured Interviews

(20–30 mins each)

2 Interview Scripts

(live shoppers + online shoppers)

15 Survey responses

collected over Goole forms

Affinity diagramming

to gather insights

Partcipant Demographics:

26-29 years old

Women

NYC/NJ based

Tech-savvy online shoppers whose fashion and lifestyle choices are influenced by digital creators.

67%

have watched live shopping events

33%

have purchased something from live shopping events

User Persona

  1. What Do Users Want

Trust Is Non-Negotiable

Users won’t engage or purchase without confidence in the platform, hosts, and products.

Avoid High-Pressure Selling

Users prefer excitement without stress or aggressive sales tactics.

Provide Clear Product Transparency

Users need reliable details like zoom-ins, replays, stills, reviews, and ratings before buying.

Deliver Relevant Guidance in Real Time

Users expect tailored recommendations and quick answers to their questions during live sessions.

Create a Premium,
Calm Experience

Users want an authentic, relationship-driven environment—not a chaotic one.


Leverage Influencer Connection

Users enjoy discovering products through creators they genuinely relate to.

Organising the Information

Information Architecture

We performed card sorting + tree testing to understand how users mentally group:

products, influencers, live interactions, seller credibility, shopping actions

What emerged:

Users weigh influencers and products equally when deciding what to explore next.
This shaped our final IA.

BEFORE

We’re on the right path for creating groups of information related to product details, interaction features, and seller information

Home

Curated

event lists

Curated

product lists

Discover

Browse live events

by influencer

Browse live events

by product category

+

AFTER

AFTER

We’re on the right path for creating groups of information related to product details, interaction features, and seller information

For You

Curated

event lists

Curated

product lists

Influencers

Home

List of influencers

Browse live events

by product category

Categories

Design

Low-Fi Prototyping

We started with sketches and designed a lo-fi prototype using our sitemap, ready for user testing

Evaluation


6 moderated user interviews.

1 task-based script

Three core flows:
  1. Discover & purchase from a live event

  2. Verify seller/influencer trustworthiness

  3. Explore influencer’s full product range Livly Evaluation Results

Users liked: 
  1. Simplicity of layout

  2. Clear navigation

  3. Seller metrics and reviews

  4. Product information

  5. AI assistant

Users didn’t like/were confused by: 
  1. Live event icons

  2. ‘Your Edit’ tab and other content

  3. Lack of stock indicators

  4. No way to search through store

  5. Missing chat on screen

Iterations

Some Key Design Decisions

#1 All-in-one home page

User Research:
Users wanted a personalised feed but also the flexibility to browse creators or categories.

Lo-Fi Concept:
Introduced a home page with three tabs: Your Edit, Influencers, and Categories—defaulting to personalised content.

User Testing:
The label Your Edit implied users could customise the feed themselves. Additionally, tapping Influencers took users directly to live events, but they expected a list of creators first.

Final Decision:

Renamed Your Edit to For You and redesigned Influencers to show a list of creators instead of immediately opening live events.

Lo-Fi Concept

Influencers tab with live events

Revised Influencer Tab

#2 Engaging but unchaotic simple Live Screen

User Research:
Users wanted quick-access features (comment, like, share, promos, save, product lineup) while avoiding a chaotic, chat-heavy live screen.

Lo-Fi Concept:
Added all requested features and nested the live chat to reduce clutter.

User Testing:
Too many icons led to confusion: the heart icon was interpreted as a wishlist, the save icon felt redundant, and the share icon resembled an upload action. Additionally, fully hiding the chat reduced user engagement.

Final Decision:

Removed redundant icons and kept only essential actions. Displayed one recent chat bubble on-screen while nesting the full chat in the comment icon.

Lo-Fi Concept

After User Testing

Final Prototype

#3 Add to Cart / Buy Now

User Research:
Users preferred a calm, non-pressured shopping experience and felt on-the-spot bidding was stressful.

Lo-Fi Concept:
Replaced bidding with prominent “Add to Cart” and “Buy Now” sticky buttons on the product details page.

User Testing:
This approach was validated—users responded positively to the simplified purchase flow.

Final Decision:
Implemented the two-button purchase model to support a more relaxed shopping experience.

No Live Bidding on Live Event

Sticky

Add to Cart/Buy Now

#4 Transparency via metrics & reviews

User Research:
Users relied heavily on trust signals and wanted clarity on seller credibility before purchasing.

Lo-Fi Concept:

Introduced seller metrics such as ratings, past performance, and key stats, along with user reviews.

User Testing and Final Decision
Users found these indicators helpful which validated our design

Customer Reviews

Seller Metrics

Seller Reviews

#5 AI Assistant Integration

User Research:
Users struggled to interact with sellers during busy live sessions, especially for returns and refund-related questions.

Lo-Fi Concept:
Added an AI assistant on the live screen that could summarise key information and answer common queries.

User Testing & Final Decision:
Users appreciated the feature, validating its inclusion as a support layer during live shopping.

Home

Live Event

Product Details

The Result

A premium, calm, curated live shopping experience


  • Strong emphasis on influencers as trusted curators, not sales agents

  • Clear, structured product details to reduce anxiety

  • Trust signals integrated across seller and influencer profiles

A final high-fidelity prototype that users described as:“so clean,” “trustworthy,” “like a boutique I want to shop from.”

Market Gap Solved

Livly fills the void between:


TikTok aesthetics × Nordstrom product trust × real-time influencer connection.

More Works

Overview

Role: UX Researcher and Designer, Information Architect
Project type: Group academic project (4 members)
Timeline: 14 weeks
Tools: Figma, UX metrics

Chaotic

pressure tactics, auction-style shouting

Untrustworthy

unknown sellers, unclear authenticity

Overwhelming

busy UI, fast chat, unclear product info

Low-quality

videos but no photos, lack of curation

Yet this same audience lives on influencer-driven platforms like TikTok, Instagram, and YouTube—where curated, personality-driven content drives their purchasing decisions every day.

Opportunity

There is no platform that treats influencers as curated, trustworthy hosts and live shopping as an elevated, boutique, editorial experience.

Livly fills this gap.

Defining The Core Problem

The redesign was guided by research and focused on clarity, trust, and brand alignment through six key initiatives:

User Research

  1. Competitive Analysis

What are other live shopping apps doing to:

  • Help sellers connect and interact with their buyers?

  • Navigate users through hundreds of live events and products?

  • Balance functionality and aesthetic?

What are they doing right? Doing wrong? How can we do better?

  1. Learning About Our Users

6 Structured Interviews

(20–30 mins each)

2 Interview Scripts

(live shoppers + online shoppers)

15 Survey responses

collected over Goole forms

Affinity diagramming

to gather insights

Partcipant Demographics:

26-29 years old

Women

NYC/NJ based

Tech-savvy online shoppers whose fashion and lifestyle choices are influenced by digital creators.

67%

have watched live shopping events

33%

have purchased something from live shopping events

User Persona

  1. What Do Users Want

Trust Is Non-Negotiable

Users won’t engage or purchase without confidence in the platform, hosts, and products.

Avoid High-Pressure Selling

Users prefer excitement without stress or aggressive sales tactics.

Provide Clear Product Transparency

Users need reliable details like zoom-ins, replays, stills, reviews, and ratings before buying.

Deliver Relevant Guidance in Real Time

Users expect tailored recommendations and quick answers to their questions during live sessions.

Create a Premium,
Calm Experience

Users want an authentic, relationship-driven environment—not a chaotic one.


Leverage Influencer Connection

Users enjoy discovering products through creators they genuinely relate to.

Organising the Information

Information Architecture

We performed card sorting + tree testing to understand how users mentally group:

products, influencers, live interactions, seller credibility, shopping actions

What emerged:

Users weigh influencers and products equally when deciding what to explore next.
This shaped our final IA.

BEFORE

We’re on the right path for creating groups of information related to product details, interaction features, and seller information

AFTER

We’re on the right path for creating groups of information related to product details, interaction features, and seller information

Design

Low-Fi Prototyping

We started with sketches and designed a lo-fi prototype using our sitemap, ready for user testing

Evaluation


6 moderated user interviews.

1 task-based script

Three core flows:
  1. Discover & purchase from a live event

  2. Verify seller/influencer trustworthiness

  3. Explore influencer’s full product range Livly Evaluation Results

Users liked: 
  1. Simplicity of layout

  2. Clear navigation

  3. Seller metrics and reviews

  4. Product information

  5. AI assistant

Users didn’t like/were confused by: 
  1. Live event icons

  2. ‘Your Edit’ tab and other content

  3. Lack of stock indicators

  4. No way to search through store

  5. Missing chat on screen

Iterations

Some Key Design Decisions

#1 All-in-one home page

User Research:
Users wanted a personalised feed but also the flexibility to browse creators or categories.

Lo-Fi Concept:
Introduced a home page with three tabs: Your Edit, Influencers, and Categories—defaulting to personalised content.

User Testing:
The label Your Edit implied users could customise the feed themselves. Additionally, tapping Influencers took users directly to live events, but they expected a list of creators first.

Final Decision:

Renamed Your Edit to For You and redesigned Influencers to show a list of creators instead of immediately opening live events.

Lo-Fi Concept

Influencers tab with live events

Revised Influencer Tab

#2 Engaging but unchaotic simple Live Screen

User Research:
Users wanted quick-access features (comment, like, share, promos, save, product lineup) while avoiding a chaotic, chat-heavy live screen.

Lo-Fi Concept:
Added all requested features and nested the live chat to reduce clutter.

User Testing:
Too many icons led to confusion: the heart icon was interpreted as a wishlist, the save icon felt redundant, and the share icon resembled an upload action. Additionally, fully hiding the chat reduced user engagement.

Final Decision:

Removed redundant icons and kept only essential actions. Displayed one recent chat bubble on-screen while nesting the full chat in the comment icon.

Lo-Fi Concept

After User Testing

Final Prototype

#3 Add to Cart / Buy Now

User Research:
Users preferred a calm, non-pressured shopping experience and felt on-the-spot bidding was stressful.

Lo-Fi Concept:
Replaced bidding with prominent “Add to Cart” and “Buy Now” sticky buttons on the product details page.

User Testing:
This approach was validated—users responded positively to the simplified purchase flow.

Final Decision:
Implemented the two-button purchase model to support a more relaxed shopping experience.

No Live Bidding on Live Event

Sticky

Add to Cart/Buy Now

#4 Transparency via metrics & reviews

User Research:
Users relied heavily on trust signals and wanted clarity on seller credibility before purchasing.

Lo-Fi Concept:

Introduced seller metrics such as ratings, past performance, and key stats, along with user reviews.

User Testing and Final Decision
Users found these indicators helpful which validated our design

Customer Reviews

Seller Metrics

Seller Reviews

#5 AI Assistant Integration

User Research:
Users struggled to interact with sellers during busy live sessions, especially for returns and refund-related questions.

Lo-Fi Concept:
Added an AI assistant on the live screen that could summarise key information and answer common queries.

User Testing & Final Decision:
Users appreciated the feature, validating its inclusion as a support layer during live shopping.

Home

Live Event

Product Details

The Result

The redesign transformed Copper Studio’s website into a modern, trustworthy, and performance-ready platform:

A premium, calm, curated live shopping experience

  • Strong emphasis on influencers as trusted curators, not sales agents

  • Clear, structured product details to reduce anxiety

  • Trust signals integrated across seller and influencer profiles

A final high-fidelity prototype that users described as:“so clean,” “trustworthy,” “like a boutique I want to shop from.”

Market Gap Solved

Livly fills the void between:


TikTok aesthetics × Nordstrom product trust × real-time influencer connection.

More Works

Woman In White Background
Woman In White Background

2025

Livly: A curated live shopping experience powered by creators

A boutique live shopping app designed around authenticity, calm, and confident discovery.

Information Architecture

User Research

User Testing

Role: UX Researcher and Designer, Information Architect
Project type: Group academic project (4 members)
Timeline: 14 weeks
Tools: Figma, UX metrics

Overview

Live shopping is booming globally—but not in the U.S.

Despite massive investments, American users (especially Gen Z and younger Millennials) still view live shopping as:

Chaotic

pressure tactics, auction-style shouting

Untrustworthy

unknown sellers, unclear authenticity

Overwhelming

busy UI, fast chat, unclear product info

Low-quality

videos but no photos, lack of curation

Yet this same audience lives on influencer-driven platforms like TikTok, Instagram, and YouTube—where curated, personality-driven content drives their purchasing decisions every day.

Opportunity

There is no platform that treats influencers as curated, trustworthy hosts and live shopping as an elevated, boutique, editorial experience.

Livly fills this gap.

Defining The Core Problem

The redesign was guided by research and focused on clarity, trust, and brand alignment through six key initiatives:

User Research

  1. Competitive Analysis

What are other live shopping apps doing to:

  • Help sellers connect and interact with their buyers?

  • Navigate users through hundreds of live events and products?

  • Balance functionality and aesthetic?

What are they doing right? Doing wrong? How can we do better?

  1. Learning About Our Users

6 Structured Interviews

(20–30 mins each)

2 Interview Scripts

(live shoppers + online shoppers)

15 Survey responses

collected over Goole forms

Affinity diagramming

to gather insights

Partcipant Demographics:

26-29 years old

Women

NYC/NJ based

Tech-savvy online shoppers whose fashion and lifestyle choices are influenced by digital creators.

67%

have watched live shopping events

33%

have purchased something from live shopping events

User Persona

  1. What Do Users Want

Trust Is Non-Negotiable

Users won’t engage or purchase without confidence in the platform, hosts, and products.

Avoid High-Pressure Selling

Users prefer excitement without stress or aggressive sales tactics.

Provide Clear Product Transparency

Users need reliable details like zoom-ins, replays, stills, reviews, and ratings before buying.

Deliver Relevant Guidance in Real Time

Users expect tailored recommendations and quick answers to their questions during live sessions.

Create a Premium,
Calm Experience

Users want an authentic, relationship-driven environment—not a chaotic one.


Leverage Influencer Connection

Users enjoy discovering products through creators they genuinely relate to.

Organising the Information

Information Architecture

We performed card sorting + tree testing to understand how users mentally group:

products, influencers, live interactions, seller credibility, shopping actions

What emerged:

Users weigh influencers and products equally when deciding what to explore next.
This shaped our final IA.

BEFORE

We’re on the right path for creating groups of information related to product details, interaction features, and seller information

Home

Curated

event lists

Curated

product lists

Discover

Browse live events

by influencer

Browse live events

by product category

+

AFTER

AFTER

We’re on the right path for creating groups of information related to product details, interaction features, and seller information

For You

Curated

event lists

Curated

product lists

Influencers

Home

List of influencers

Browse live events

by product category

Categories

Design

Low-Fi Prototyping

We started with sketches and designed a lo-fi prototype using our sitemap, ready for user testing

Evaluation


6 moderated user interviews.

1 task-based script

Three core flows:
  1. Discover & purchase from a live event

  2. Verify seller/influencer trustworthiness

  3. Explore influencer’s full product range Livly Evaluation Results

Users liked: 
  1. Simplicity of layout

  2. Clear navigation

  3. Seller metrics and reviews

  4. Product information

  5. AI assistant

Users didn’t like/were confused by: 
  1. Live event icons

  2. ‘Your Edit’ tab and other content

  3. Lack of stock indicators

  4. No way to search through store

  5. Missing chat on screen

Iterations

Some Key Design Decisions

#1 All-in-one home page

User Research:
Users wanted a personalised feed but also the flexibility to browse creators or categories.

Lo-Fi Concept:
Introduced a home page with three tabs: Your Edit, Influencers, and Categories—defaulting to personalised content.

User Testing:
The label Your Edit implied users could customise the feed themselves. Additionally, tapping Influencers took users directly to live events, but they expected a list of creators first.

Final Decision:

Renamed Your Edit to For You and redesigned Influencers to show a list of creators instead of immediately opening live events.

Lo-Fi Concept

Influencers tab with live events

Revised Influencer Tab

#2 Engaging but unchaotic simple Live Screen

User Research:
Users wanted quick-access features (comment, like, share, promos, save, product lineup) while avoiding a chaotic, chat-heavy live screen.

Lo-Fi Concept:
Added all requested features and nested the live chat to reduce clutter.

User Testing:
Too many icons led to confusion: the heart icon was interpreted as a wishlist, the save icon felt redundant, and the share icon resembled an upload action. Additionally, fully hiding the chat reduced user engagement.

Final Decision:

Removed redundant icons and kept only essential actions. Displayed one recent chat bubble on-screen while nesting the full chat in the comment icon.

Lo-Fi Concept

After User Testing

Final Prototype

#3 Add to Cart / Buy Now

User Research:
Users preferred a calm, non-pressured shopping experience and felt on-the-spot bidding was stressful.

Lo-Fi Concept:
Replaced bidding with prominent “Add to Cart” and “Buy Now” sticky buttons on the product details page.

User Testing:
This approach was validated—users responded positively to the simplified purchase flow.

Final Decision:
Implemented the two-button purchase model to support a more relaxed shopping experience.

No Live Bidding on Live Event

Sticky

Add to Cart/Buy Now

#4 Transparency via metrics & reviews

User Research:
Users relied heavily on trust signals and wanted clarity on seller credibility before purchasing.

Lo-Fi Concept:

Introduced seller metrics such as ratings, past performance, and key stats, along with user reviews.

User Testing and Final Decision
Users found these indicators helpful which validated our design

Customer Reviews

Seller Metrics

Seller Reviews

#5 AI Assistant Integration

User Research:
Users struggled to interact with sellers during busy live sessions, especially for returns and refund-related questions.

Lo-Fi Concept:
Added an AI assistant on the live screen that could summarise key information and answer common queries.

User Testing & Final Decision:
Users appreciated the feature, validating its inclusion as a support layer during live shopping.

Home

Live Event

Product Details

The Result

A premium, calm, curated live shopping experience


  • Strong emphasis on influencers as trusted curators, not sales agents

  • Clear, structured product details to reduce anxiety

  • Trust signals integrated across seller and influencer profiles

A final high-fidelity prototype that users described as:“so clean,” “trustworthy,” “like a boutique I want to shop from.”

Market Gap Solved

Livly fills the void between:


TikTok aesthetics × Nordstrom product trust × real-time influencer connection.

More Works

Overview

Role: UX Researcher and Designer, Information Architect
Project type: Group academic project (4 members)
Timeline: 14 weeks
Tools: Figma, UX metrics

Chaotic

pressure tactics, auction-style shouting

Untrustworthy

unknown sellers, unclear authenticity

Overwhelming

busy UI, fast chat, unclear product info

Low-quality

videos but no photos, lack of curation

Yet this same audience lives on influencer-driven platforms like TikTok, Instagram, and YouTube—where curated, personality-driven content drives their purchasing decisions every day.

Opportunity

There is no platform that treats influencers as curated, trustworthy hosts and live shopping as an elevated, boutique, editorial experience.

Livly fills this gap.

Defining The Core Problem

The redesign was guided by research and focused on clarity, trust, and brand alignment through six key initiatives:

User Research

  1. Competitive Analysis

What are other live shopping apps doing to:

  • Help sellers connect and interact with their buyers?

  • Navigate users through hundreds of live events and products?

  • Balance functionality and aesthetic?

What are they doing right? Doing wrong? How can we do better?

  1. Learning About Our Users

6 Structured Interviews

(20–30 mins each)

2 Interview Scripts

(live shoppers + online shoppers)

15 Survey responses

collected over Goole forms

Affinity diagramming

to gather insights

Partcipant Demographics:

26-29 years old

Women

NYC/NJ based

Tech-savvy online shoppers whose fashion and lifestyle choices are influenced by digital creators.

67%

have watched live shopping events

33%

have purchased something from live shopping events

User Persona

  1. What Do Users Want

Trust Is Non-Negotiable

Users won’t engage or purchase without confidence in the platform, hosts, and products.

Avoid High-Pressure Selling

Users prefer excitement without stress or aggressive sales tactics.

Provide Clear Product Transparency

Users need reliable details like zoom-ins, replays, stills, reviews, and ratings before buying.

Deliver Relevant Guidance in Real Time

Users expect tailored recommendations and quick answers to their questions during live sessions.

Create a Premium,
Calm Experience

Users want an authentic, relationship-driven environment—not a chaotic one.


Leverage Influencer Connection

Users enjoy discovering products through creators they genuinely relate to.

Organising the Information

Information Architecture

We performed card sorting + tree testing to understand how users mentally group:

products, influencers, live interactions, seller credibility, shopping actions

What emerged:

Users weigh influencers and products equally when deciding what to explore next.
This shaped our final IA.

BEFORE

We’re on the right path for creating groups of information related to product details, interaction features, and seller information

AFTER

We’re on the right path for creating groups of information related to product details, interaction features, and seller information

Design

Low-Fi Prototyping

We started with sketches and designed a lo-fi prototype using our sitemap, ready for user testing

Evaluation


6 moderated user interviews.

1 task-based script

Three core flows:
  1. Discover & purchase from a live event

  2. Verify seller/influencer trustworthiness

  3. Explore influencer’s full product range Livly Evaluation Results

Users liked: 
  1. Simplicity of layout

  2. Clear navigation

  3. Seller metrics and reviews

  4. Product information

  5. AI assistant

Users didn’t like/were confused by: 
  1. Live event icons

  2. ‘Your Edit’ tab and other content

  3. Lack of stock indicators

  4. No way to search through store

  5. Missing chat on screen

Iterations

Some Key Design Decisions

#1 All-in-one home page

User Research:
Users wanted a personalised feed but also the flexibility to browse creators or categories.

Lo-Fi Concept:
Introduced a home page with three tabs: Your Edit, Influencers, and Categories—defaulting to personalised content.

User Testing:
The label Your Edit implied users could customise the feed themselves. Additionally, tapping Influencers took users directly to live events, but they expected a list of creators first.

Final Decision:

Renamed Your Edit to For You and redesigned Influencers to show a list of creators instead of immediately opening live events.

Lo-Fi Concept

Influencers tab with live events

Revised Influencer Tab

#2 Engaging but unchaotic simple Live Screen

User Research:
Users wanted quick-access features (comment, like, share, promos, save, product lineup) while avoiding a chaotic, chat-heavy live screen.

Lo-Fi Concept:
Added all requested features and nested the live chat to reduce clutter.

User Testing:
Too many icons led to confusion: the heart icon was interpreted as a wishlist, the save icon felt redundant, and the share icon resembled an upload action. Additionally, fully hiding the chat reduced user engagement.

Final Decision:

Removed redundant icons and kept only essential actions. Displayed one recent chat bubble on-screen while nesting the full chat in the comment icon.

Lo-Fi Concept

After User Testing

Final Prototype

#3 Add to Cart / Buy Now

User Research:
Users preferred a calm, non-pressured shopping experience and felt on-the-spot bidding was stressful.

Lo-Fi Concept:
Replaced bidding with prominent “Add to Cart” and “Buy Now” sticky buttons on the product details page.

User Testing:
This approach was validated—users responded positively to the simplified purchase flow.

Final Decision:
Implemented the two-button purchase model to support a more relaxed shopping experience.

No Live Bidding on Live Event

Sticky

Add to Cart/Buy Now

#4 Transparency via metrics & reviews

User Research:
Users relied heavily on trust signals and wanted clarity on seller credibility before purchasing.

Lo-Fi Concept:

Introduced seller metrics such as ratings, past performance, and key stats, along with user reviews.

User Testing and Final Decision
Users found these indicators helpful which validated our design

Customer Reviews

Seller Metrics

Seller Reviews

#5 AI Assistant Integration

User Research:
Users struggled to interact with sellers during busy live sessions, especially for returns and refund-related questions.

Lo-Fi Concept:
Added an AI assistant on the live screen that could summarise key information and answer common queries.

User Testing & Final Decision:
Users appreciated the feature, validating its inclusion as a support layer during live shopping.

Home

Live Event

Product Details

The Result

The redesign transformed Copper Studio’s website into a modern, trustworthy, and performance-ready platform:

A premium, calm, curated live shopping experience

  • Strong emphasis on influencers as trusted curators, not sales agents

  • Clear, structured product details to reduce anxiety

  • Trust signals integrated across seller and influencer profiles

A final high-fidelity prototype that users described as:“so clean,” “trustworthy,” “like a boutique I want to shop from.”

Market Gap Solved

Livly fills the void between:


TikTok aesthetics × Nordstrom product trust × real-time influencer connection.

More Works

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