Design Sprints

Validate your UX ideas in little time

Design sprints help reduce risk and align stakeholders around a shared vision before investing in development. We facilitate short, structured workshops so your teams can generate concepts, turn them into prototypes, and test them with real users.

What we offer

Focused ideation — In one or a few sessions, we frame the challenge, generate solution ideas, and prioritize which ones to test. The goal: clear, shared, actionable ideas.

Rapid prototyping — We turn selected concepts into interactive mockups or lightweight prototypes (clickable screens, simplified flows) so they are tangible and easy to discuss without full development.

Real-world validation — We put these prototypes in front of users or stakeholders to gather concrete feedback. You validate or adjust the UX direction before building the final solution.

Why mini-sprints?

We favour short, focused sprints over long processes: less delay, lower cost, and decisions based on evidence (real feedback) rather than guesswork. Ideal for exploring a new feature, a critical user journey, or an interface redesign without committing to a large project upfront.

A boost for your projects

Whether you are a museum, municipality, or event organisation, design sprints help you test UX assumptions quickly and make informed decisions. We facilitate the workshops, deliver outputs (summaries, prototypes, test reports), and work at your pace.

If you want to frame an idea, prototype a flow, or validate a concept before building, let’s talk about your goals.

The Propeller: a facilitated day of co-creation

The Propeller is a strategic immersion day where your team moves from intent to a concrete concept for a product or service—instead of spending months uncertain about audience, naming, or prototypes, you compress that cycle into one workshop day. It is not a simple consultation: it is a production workshop centred on vision, discussion, and strategy, with AI used when helpful to free time for what matters. In one day (morning: foundations, target audience, and business model; midday: informal exchange; afternoon: mockups, voting, and a naming sprint), you leave with a business model canvas, a mockup, and a shortlist of names—a head start that gives you an action plan ready to present or build.