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ui-audit

Ttommygeoco
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tommygeoco/ui-audit
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💡 Summary

English summary.

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name: ui-audit description: "AI skill for automated UI audits. Evaluate interfaces against proven UX principles for visual hierarchy, accessibility, cognitive load, navigation, and more. Based on Making UX Decisions by Tommy Geoco." author: Tommy Geoco homepage: https://audit.uxtools.co logo: logo-light.png logoDark: logo-dark.png

UI Audit Skill

Evaluate interfaces against proven UX principles. Based on Making UX Decisions by Tommy Geoco.

When to Use This Skill

  • Making UI/UX design decisions under time pressure
  • Evaluating design trade-offs with business context
  • Choosing appropriate UI patterns for specific problems
  • Reviewing designs for completeness and quality
  • Structuring design thinking for new interfaces

Core Philosophy

Speed ≠ Recklessness. Designing quickly is not automatically reckless. Recklessly designing quickly is reckless. The difference is intentionality.

The 3 Pillars of Warp-Speed Decisioning

  1. Scaffolding — Rules you use to automate recurring decisions
  2. Decisioning — Process you use for making new decisions
  3. Crafting — Checklists you use for executing decisions

Quick Reference Structure

Foundational Frameworks

  • references/00-core-framework.md — 3 pillars, decisioning workflow, macro bets
  • references/01-anchors.md — 7 foundational mindsets for design resilience
  • references/02-information-scaffold.md — Psychology, economics, accessibility, defaults

Checklists (Execution)

  • references/10-checklist-new-interfaces.md — 6-step process for designing new interfaces
  • references/11-checklist-fidelity.md — Component states, interactions, scalability, feedback
  • references/12-checklist-visual-style.md — Spacing, color, elevation, typography, motion
  • references/13-checklist-innovation.md — 5 levels of originality spectrum

Patterns (Reusable Solutions)

  • references/20-patterns-chunking.md — Cards, tabs, accordions, pagination, carousels
  • references/21-patterns-progressive-disclosure.md — Tooltips, popovers, drawers, modals
  • references/22-patterns-cognitive-load.md — Steppers, wizards, minimalist nav, simplified forms
  • references/23-patterns-visual-hierarchy.md — Typography, color, whitespace, size, proximity
  • references/24-patterns-social-proof.md — Testimonials, UGC, badges, social integration
  • references/25-patterns-feedback.md — Progress bars, notifications, validation, contextual help
  • references/26-patterns-error-handling.md — Form validation, undo/redo, dialogs, autosave
  • references/27-patterns-accessibility.md — Keyboard nav, ARIA, alt text, contrast, zoom
  • references/28-patterns-personalization.md — Dashboards, adaptive content, preferences, l10n
  • references/29-patterns-onboarding.md — Tours, contextual tips, tutorials, checklists
  • references/30-patterns-information.md — Breadcrumbs, sitemaps, tagging, faceted search
  • references/31-patterns-navigation.md — Priority nav, off-canvas, sticky, bottom nav

Usage Instructions

For Design Decisions

  1. Read 00-core-framework.md for the decisioning workflow
  2. Identify if this is a recurring decision (use scaffold) or new decision (use process)
  3. Apply the 3-step weighing: institutional knowledge → user familiarity → research

For New Interfaces

  1. Follow the 6-step checklist in 10-checklist-new-interfaces.md
  2. Reference relevant pattern files for specific UI components
  3. Use fidelity and visual style checklists to enhance quality

For Pattern Selection

  1. Identify the core problem (chunking, disclosure, cognitive load, etc.)
  2. Load the relevant pattern reference
  3. Evaluate benefits, use cases, psychological principles, and implementation guidelines

Decision Workflow Summary

When facing a UI decision:

1. WEIGH INFORMATION
   ├─ What does institutional knowledge say? (existing patterns, brand, tech constraints)
   ├─ What are users familiar with? (conventions, competitor patterns)
   └─ What does research say? (user testing, analytics, studies)

2. NARROW OPTIONS
   ├─ Eliminate what conflicts with constraints
   ├─ Prioritize what aligns with macro bets
   └─ Choose based on JTBD support

3. EXECUTE
   └─ Apply relevant checklist + patterns

Macro Bet Categories

Companies win through one or more of:

| Bet | Description | Design Implication | |-----|-------------|-------------------| | Velocity | Features to market faster | Reuse patterns, find metaphors in other markets | | Efficiency | Manage waste better | Design systems, reduce WIP | | Accuracy | Be right more often | Stronger research, instrumentation | | Innovation | Discover untapped potential | Novel patterns, cross-domain inspiration |

Always align micro design bets with company macro bets.

Key Principle: Good Design Decisions Are Relative

A design decision is "good" when it:

  • Supports the product's jobs-to-be-done
  • Aligns with company macro bets
  • Respects constraints (time, tech, team)
  • Balances user familiarity with differentiation needs

There is no universally correct UI solution—only contextually appropriate ones.


Generating Audit Reports

When asked to audit a design, generate a comprehensive report. Always include these sections:

Required Sections (always include)

  1. Visual Hierarchy — Headings, CTAs, grouping, reading flow, type scale, color hierarchy, whitespace
  2. Visual Style — Spacing consistency, color usage, elevation/depth, typography, motion/animation
  3. Accessibility — Keyboard navigation, focus states, contrast ratios, screen reader support, touch targets

Contextual Sections (include when relevant)

  1. Navigation — For multi-page apps: wayfinding, breadcrumbs, menu structure, information architecture
  2. Usability — For interactive flows: discoverability, feedback, error handling, cognitive load
  3. Onboarding — For new user experiences: first-run, tutorials, progressive disclosure
  4. Social Proof — For landing/marketing pages: testimonials, trust signals, social integration
  5. Forms — For data entry: labels, validation, error messages, field types

Audit Output Format

{ "title": "Design Name — Screen/Flow", "project": "Project Name", "date": "YYYY-MM-DD", "figma_url": "optional", "screenshot_url": "optional - URL to screenshot", "macro_bets": [ { "category": "velocity|efficiency|accuracy|innovation", "description": "...", "alignment": "strong|moderate|weak" } ], "jtbd": [ { "user": "User Type", "situation": "context without 'When'", "motivation": "goal without 'I want to'", "outcome": "benefit without 'so I can'" } ], "visual_hierarchy": { "title": "Visual Hierarchy", "checks": [ { "label": "Check name", "status": "pass|warn|fail|na", "notes": "Details" } ] }, "visual_style": { ... }, "accessibility": { ... }, "priority_fixes": [ { "rank": 1, "title": "Fix title", "description": "What and why", "framework_reference": "XX-filename.md → Section Name" } ], "notes": "Optional overall observations" }

Checks Per Section (aim for 6-10 each)

Visual Hierarchy: heading distinction, primary action clarity, grouping/proximity, reading flow, type scale, color hierarchy, whitespace usage, visual weight balance

Visual Style: spacing consistency, color palette adherence, elevation/shadows, typography system, border/radius consistency, icon style, motion principles

Accessibility: keyboard operability, visible focus, color contrast (4.5:1), touch targets (44px), alt text, semantic markup, reduced motion support

Navigation: clear current location, predictable menu behavior, breadcrumb presence, search accessibility, mobile navigation pattern

Usability: feature discoverability, feedback on actions, error prevention, recovery options, cognitive load management, loading states

5-Dim Analysis
Clarity8/10
Novelty6/10
Utility8/10
Completeness7/10
Maintainability7/10
Pros & Cons

Pros

  • p1
  • p2

Cons

  • c1
  • c2

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Copyright belongs to the original author tommygeoco.