How might we envision an ecosystem of eye-care devices while developing and de-risking new technologies?

Alcon Vision Suite

Next-generation surgical suite journey refresh (NGSS)

Client: Alcon

Year: 2017 - 2022

Project Type: Service Design, UX/UI Design, Experience Design

My role: Project director guiding design team and leading end-to-end engagement across research, journey mapping, co-design workshops, and experience strategy. Over a 5 year period I led and oversaw 8 engagements spanning 6 design disciplines and 28+ contributors over 5 locations from the Philips global design function.


The Challenge

Starting from a fragmented experience and device landscape, Alcon came to Philips’ Design team to help envision and design their E2E next-generation “Unity” surgical suite ecosystem. Data from diagnostic devices were disconnected, new R&D efforts were underway, and they had limited internal design resources.

This program evolved into a multi-year consulting relationship of over $2M in consulting revenue that strengthened the Philips + Alcon cloud services partnership, leveraged Philips global design team capabilities to broaden the scope of our consulting team, and enhanced quality and UX across a suite of complex medical devices; de-risking a first-of-kind diagnostic device and harmonizing the design language across the ecosystem.

The Approach

Given the significant changes in technologies and internal strategy evolution at Alcon since the original NGSS vision was defined in 2017, we needed to validate the relevance of certain key features of the ecosystem and determine the viability and technical requirements of the system.

To do that, we conducted rapid, robust field research during discovery and emphasized the framing phase in the scope, where challenges were defined and device and data-flow requirements were highlighted.

Lastly, the build phase defined 18 solutions and the most significant impact areas for teams to focus on moving forward.

Overview of phases and activities in the four-month long NGSS journey refresh I led in 2022, five years after the original vision was created.

How we framed it

A sampling of some of the activities and artifacts created along the way during the project. Close collaboration and coordination was required across multiple teams.

What Changed

A clear signal that a project has lasting value is a client who returns to it. Five years after the original NGSS vision was created in 2017, Alcon came back to refresh it because the ecosystem it described had changed significantly. New acquisitions, evolved technologies, and a shifting market had transformed the landscape the original map was built to guide.

That return engagement is an outcome I point to most often when talking about this program, and the value of service design more broadly. It reflects both the durability of the original work and the depth of the trust relationship built across eight projects and a multi-year consulting engagement totaling more than $2M.

$2M+

Consulting program across 8 projects over 5 years

5 yrs.

Client returned to refresh original journey framework

Following the NGSS refresh, a Design Language System project formalized what the journey work had made visible: translating experience principles into consistent UI standards, interaction patterns, and brand expression across the full Alcon device and software ecosystem. Where the journey maps defined what the experience should feel like for surgeons and clinical staff, the DLS defined how every interface element would express it. Together they gave Alcon's global product teams a shared design language that could scale across hardware and software, clinic and operating room.