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## Let’s fair trade
Creation of an ecommerce platform for second-hand clothes on desktop and mobile
Bruno loves fashion. He loves buying clothes! As he is cautious with the environment, he prefers buying second-hand clothing. However, the existing platforms are not very user-friendly.
"I need to know more about the environmental impact of the pieces I buy. I’d like to know how old they are, where they are coming from, to measure their life and the amount of kilometres they have traveled. When a new pair of jeans arrive at the ready-to-wear store in Europe, they consumed approximately 11,000 litres of water and travelled 65,000 kilometres. I’d like to monitor that kind of data.’
You gather a team of 3 to think and design a website and an app for second-hand products.
You have to meet Bruno after 2 weeks to give a first presentation of your work, after completing a tested mid-fidelity prototype.
The final presentation of your work will take place 2 weeks after the mid presentation, where you’ll show a tested high-fidelity prototype.
**Estimated time:** 4 weeks
**Team size:** 3 people max
**Guidelines:**
- You may consider building your UX and UI strategy before jumping in. Remember to question the initial brief with user research.
- Beware all the steps of the design process:
- Empathy
- Define
- Problem Statement
- Ideation
- Prototype
- Test
- You must interview or ask real people during the Empathy / User Research and Test phases.
- In both phases, you must test your prototypes with at least 5 people.
**Let’s fair trade. Phase 2, the UI**
Show a tested high-fidelity prototype.
**Guidelines:**
- Test your prototypes with at least 5 people.
- Make a presentation as if you were showing your work to Bruno. Make sure there are at least 5 people in the audience.
- Prepare a feedback form to send the audience. The form must include at least the questions listed below.
- You may use the presentation audits to structure your presentations.
Don't forget to:
- Upload the documents on Github, in a zip folder named “ProjectTitle_Name_FirstName”, with all project deliverables as follows: “Name_FirstName_DeliverableName_Date_VersionNumber”. For example, the first deliverable can be named as “Doe_John_MidFiPrototype_05242024_V1”.
- Add a title within all written documents.
- Timing: 20 minutes for the presentation and 10 minutes for Q&A.
### Presentation
**Final presentation audit**
Make sure:
- At least 5 people are attending the presentation
- The presentation is about the whole UX/UI process, including:
- For the UX phase:
- The initial brief.
- A project planning, including the UX phases, the tools chosen, the timeline.
- User research findings from qualitative and quantitative research (persona, figures, etc.).
- A problem statement to adapt the initial brief based on the research findings.
- An introduction of the concept that came out of the ideation.
- The animated mid-fidelity prototype (a demo-video).
- The main feedback from usability testing.
- For the UI phase:
- A project planning, including the UI phases, the tools chosen, the timeline.
- A moodboard.
- A styleguide (colors, branding, typography, some elements of the library).
- The animated high-fidelity prototype (a demo-video).
- The main feedback from usability and desirability testing.
- The next steps of the project.
- The presentation does not exceed 20 minutes.
- Feedback forms have been shared at the beginning of the presentation.
**Questions to ask in the feedback forms**
- What do you remember of this presentation?
- On a scale from 0 to 10, how clear was the speech?
- Why?
- On a scale from 0 to 10, how engaging was the presentation?
- Why?
- On a scale from 0 to 10, how coherent was the presentation?
- Why?
- On a scale from 0 to 10, how impactful were the visuals?
- Why?
- On a scale from 0 to 10, how clear was the problem?
- Why ?
- On a scale from 0 to 10, how well does the prototype answers the problem?
- Why?
- What recommendation would you like to make to improve this presentation?
- Why?
**Resources:**
- [Google Forms](https://docs.google.com/forms/u/0/)
- [Airtable](https://www.airtable.com/)
- [Typeform](https://www.typeform.com/)
**Tips:**
- [Effective presentation skills](https://academic.oup.com/femsle/article/364/24/fnx235/4587905)
- Pay attention to the global aspect of the deliverables. They must be clear, simple and easy to read. You can get inspiration [canva](https://www.canva.com/) but don’t overload your design with too much details!
**Quote:**
“Your mission in any presentation is to inform, educate, and inspire.” Robert Ballard.