Pathao's delivery heroes were completing 10+ deliveries a day with an app that wasn't designed for them, too many taps under pressure, unclear status at every step, and no way to manage orders without pulling over. I redesigned the complete delivery partner flow: 5 core screens, from order request to drop-off confirmation. Result: 10% improvement in order completion rate and a 60% reduction in taps per delivery.
TL;DR
Problem: Delivery heroes were navigating traffic and managing orders on an app built for office desks, confusing flows, too many taps, unclear status. What I did: Field research with delivery partners, redesigned all 5 screens of the delivery flow, prototyped and tested with real heroes. Impact: 10% uplift in order completion, 60% fewer taps per delivery, meaningfully higher hero satisfaction scores.
The existing app required 4–5 taps for core actions, had unclear status at each step, and forced heroes to switch between screens to get basic order info, all while riding in dense Dhaka traffic.
Field observation with active delivery heroes, task analysis, wireframe ideation, high-fidelity prototyping of 5 screens, usability testing with real delivery partners.
Real-world workflow observation, delivery hero interviews, prototype testing sessions, iteration on pick-up and drop-off failure points, post-launch hero satisfaction data.
End-to-end: field research, task analysis, wireframing, UI design, prototyping, and usability testing. Owned the design from problem discovery through to release.
Design Audit
Field research and interviews with active delivery partners revealed consistent, costly friction points. The existing interface was designed without considering the real-world context of delivery work, navigating traffic, handling bags, and making split-second decisions.
Accepting and tracking orders required multiple screens with unclear states. Heroes tapped the wrong action under time pressure, causing order confusion and failed deliveries.
Core actions like confirming pickup or marking delivery required 4–5 taps. For heroes completing 10+ deliveries a day, the extra friction added up to lost earnings.
Heroes were unsure which step they were on, pickup, en route, or delivered, leading to errors, missed confirmations, and repeat customer contacts.
Switching between map, order details, and customer contact required too many screen transitions, a critical inefficiency when riding through dense traffic.
User Flow
We mapped the full delivery partner workflow, from receiving an order request to confirming drop-off, identifying the exact moments where the current flow was breaking down and where design could reduce cognitive load most effectively.
New Delivery Flow
The redesign focused on three principles: reduce cognitive load, surface only what's needed at each step, and make the most important actions reachable with one thumb. Here's every step of the new flow.
When a new order comes in, heroes need to make a fast accept/decline decision. The redesigned request card surfaces the key info, restaurant name, earnings, and distance, in a clear layout with a single, prominent ACCEPT button that's impossible to miss, even while moving.
After accepting, heroes see the complete order breakdown, item count, special instructions, restaurant location, and one-tap navigation. No drilling through sub-screens. Everything needed to execute the pickup is visible on a single card.
For heroes managing multiple deliveries, the order queue gives a clear prioritised view, with status badges, estimated completion times, and earnings per order. At a glance, heroes know what's next without any tapping or scrolling through unclear states.
The pick-up confirmation screen is stripped down to the essentials: confirm items collected, then tap once to start delivery. The oversized CTA is designed for one-handed use while holding a bag, and the step indicator keeps heroes oriented in the overall flow.
Drop-off confirmation surfaces address verification, a photo upload option for proof of delivery, and an instant earnings update. The clear success state reduces ambiguity, repeat customer contacts, and delivery disputes, ending each job on a confident note.
All Screens
Every screen in the redesigned Pathao Drive delivery flow, from initial order request through to successful drop-off, in a single overview.
Outcome
Post-launch data and hero feedback confirmed that the redesigned flow meaningfully reduced errors and time-on-task, translating directly into more deliveries per shift and higher hero satisfaction.
10%
Improvement in successful delivery completion, driven by clearer step indicators and reduced tap errors.
↓ 60%
Core delivery actions cut from 4–5 taps to 1–2, removing friction from every single order in the shift.
↑ Sat.
Post-launch feedback from delivery partners showed significantly higher ease-of-use ratings and less reported stress during peak delivery windows.
Reflection
Working on Pathao Drive was a lesson in designing for extreme constraints. Our users weren't sitting at a desk with time to think, they were on motorbikes, in traffic, under time and earnings pressure. Every extra step in the UI had a real human cost.
It reinforced a principle I carry into every project: the best interface is the one that disappears. When the design works, heroes stop thinking about the app and focus on the job. That's the goal.