Hi, I’m Abigail Aghaibie — a Product Designer 60% of the time and a K-drama fan the other 40%. I love getting into users' heads (🙃not in a creepy way) to solve problems and design solutions that just make sense.
Check out my work & design resources
https://t.co/xDC12W41iA
We've been reviewing for days.
100+ submissions. The quality was exceptional.
Picking 10 from a sea of incredible work was genuinely hard, and that's the best problem to have.
Congratulations to our winners 👇
The $300 pool is yours. Well deserved.
If you publish without observing what works, you're using it like a megaphone.
If you publish and study the patterns, you're using it like a lab.
Clarity doesn't come from waiting until you've thought something perfectly. It comes from publishing, watching what resonates.
We won third place in today’s sellathon @ns.
Myself and @Web3Precious went out to discuss the pain point of crypto native earners and proofing their funds to institutions. The pain & lose that comes with converting assets to fiat just to get bank grade statement for various applications (visa, lease, mortgage) we presented @statem_finance
Shoutout to @SuperteamMY@SoodGen@hanstmy@tuakdotsol@James_of_Arc for putting together this mini hackathon
Awareness beats effort when effort is misdirected.
I don't always get it right. But I'm learning that awareness beats effort when effort is misdirected.
What's something you kept trying harder at before realizing the problem was somewhere else entirely?
The second time I fell down the stairs, I was doing everything right.
No phone. Eyes forward. Hand on the railing. Slow, deliberate steps.
I got to the last step and slipped anyway.
That's when I realized the problem wasn't my effort.
Effort matters. But so does stepping back.
When something fails twice, I'm trying to resist the urge to just try harder.
Instead, I'm asking: What am I assuming is true that might not be? What would someone outside this see that I can't?
Here’s the part I’m still thinking about:
How do you design for the moment a casual glance turns into:
“Wait… something’s wrong here.”
Because that transition from overview → investigation is where many dashboards break.
What product do you think handles that well?
I used to think good dashboards showed everything at once.
Then I watched someone panic trying to find one important detail buried under 15 widgets.
That’s when I realized:
Dashboards fail when they confuse comprehensiveness with clarity 🧵
This isn’t about dumbing dashboards down.
It’s about recognizing that the same person has different needs on different days.
Sometimes you just want reassurance.
Other times you’re investigating a problem.
Same product. Different urgency.