What is UI/UX Design?

UI/UX design covers two related disciplines that often get bundled together. UX (user experience) design is the work of understanding how users actually behave, designing flows and interactions that match their mental models, structuring information so people can find what they need, and validating design decisions against user testing rather than internal assumptions. UI (user interface) design is the visual and interactive layer — the specific design of buttons, forms, layouts, typography, colour, and the visual system that users actually see and interact with. Together they determine whether a product feels usable or frustrating. UI/UX design differs from general visual design in measurement and methodology. Visual design optimises for aesthetic outcomes — does it look good, does it match the brand, does it stand out. UI/UX design optimises for behavioural outcomes — can users complete the task, do they understand what to do next, where do they get stuck. The disciplines overlap in execution but diverge in priority. A beautiful interface that users can't navigate has failed the UX brief regardless of how it looks. Strong UI/UX work balances aesthetic ambition with behavioural effectiveness rather than treating them as separate concerns.

In practice for a Saudi business: a Jeddah-based booking platform has a beautifully designed homepage but conversion rates drop sharply at the booking flow. We run usability testing with real users and find specific friction points — a calendar component that doesn't match how Saudi users select dates, form fields ordered in a way that creates input errors, a payment confirmation step that doesn't clearly indicate success or failure, and Arabic form labels that don't communicate field purpose clearly. We redesign the booking flow through proper UX work — user research, wireframing, prototyping, and testing — and conversion rates through the redesigned flow improve substantially.

Why UI/UX Design matters for businesses in Riyadh, Jeddah & Dammam

Vision 2030's digital transformation produced a generation of Saudi consumers and business users who have used best-in-class international applications and expect Saudi products to match that bar. The reference point for usability isn't local equivalents anymore — it's whatever international app the user opened earlier today. Saudi digital products that feel clunky, hard to navigate, or visibly inferior to international references lose users regardless of underlying functionality. Riyadh's UI/UX market includes enterprise applications, fintech products, government-adjacent digital services, and B2B platforms with substantial user bases. The capital's product teams increasingly invest in proper UX work because the audience expectations are set against international product references. Saudi banks, fintech startups, and enterprise software teams in Riyadh all face usability benchmarks set by international competitors operating in the same market.

Jeddah's UI/UX work spans consumer applications, hospitality and tourism platforms, retail technology, and creative-led digital products. The aesthetic and usability bar runs particularly high for consumer products in Jeddah's hospitality and lifestyle context. Users compare Saudi consumer applications against international references they use daily, and weak UI/UX immediately signals lower product quality even when underlying functionality is strong.

Dammam and Eastern Province UI/UX work concentrates on B2B and industrial digital products, internal enterprise systems, logistics platforms, and operational software supporting industrial workflows. The user expectations differ from consumer products — operational efficiency, role-based access patterns, complex workflow handling, and integration with enterprise systems matter more than aesthetic ambition. Eastern Province UI/UX work often emphasises functional density and workflow optimisation over visual polish.

What's included in our UI/UX Design service

UI/UX design scopes from focused interface redesigns to comprehensive product design including user research and design system development. Our standard scope covers the disciplines that produce usable products. - User research including interviews, surveys, and behavioural analysis where existing product data is available - Information architecture for complex products with multiple user types, roles, and workflows - User flow design covering the paths users take through the product to accomplish their goals - Wireframing at appropriate fidelity for the project — from low-fidelity sketches through detailed wireframes - Interactive prototyping in Figma or similar tools for usability testing before development - Visual design including typography, colour, iconography, and the complete UI system - Design system development with reusable components, documented patterns, and design tokens for development handoff - Arabic RTL design treatment with proper RTL component behaviour, Arabic typography selection, and culturally appropriate visual choices - Usability testing with real users to validate design decisions before development investment - Accessibility consideration including WCAG compliance where requirements specify it - Design handoff documentation for development teams with specifications, assets, and interaction notes

What separates RankRush's UI/UX work from agencies that produce pretty mockups is methodology discipline. We do actual user research where existing product data doesn't answer the questions, we validate design decisions through usability testing rather than internal preference, and we treat the design as a hypothesis to be tested rather than a finished deliverable. The discipline matters because UI/UX failures compound expensively once products reach development and launch.

How we deliver UI/UX Design

The engagement runs through four phases with iteration cycles embedded throughout. 1. Discovery and user research. Working session covering business goals, user types, current product state if one exists, and the specific UX questions the project needs to answer. User research where appropriate — interviews, surveys, behavioural data analysis, competitive analysis. Output is a research summary including key user insights and design implications.

2. Information architecture and user flow design. Information architecture for the product's content and functionality structure. User flow design covering the primary paths users take through the product. These structural decisions get reviewed and approved before visual design work begins to prevent late-stage rework.

3. Wireframing, prototyping, and visual design. Wireframes at appropriate fidelity, visual design development with the UI system, and interactive prototypes in Figma for usability testing. Iteration cycles based on stakeholder review and user testing. Arabic RTL versions developed in parallel with English where bilingual.

4. Usability testing, refinement, and handoff. Usability testing with real users where the project scope supports it. Design refinements based on testing findings. Final design handoff to development with proper specifications, design tokens, component documentation, and interaction notes that support clean development implementation.

Results you can expect from UI/UX Design

UI/UX design produces results through better task completion rates, lower abandonment, improved conversion rates, and reduced support burden — outcomes that emerge once the design ships to users. Most engagements produce design improvements that are validated through testing before development rather than discovered as problems post-launch. The investment in proper UX methodology pays back through reduced rework and improved business outcomes once the product ships. Specific outcomes from proper UI/UX work:

The economic outcome that matters most is whether the product actually achieves its commercial purpose. Proper UI/UX work substantially improves the probability that products built on the designs achieve their goals. Cutting corners on UX typically produces products that ship on time and fail commercially — outcomes that cost far more than the UX investment would have.

Industries that benefit most from UI/UX Design

UI/UX design returns are strongest where product complexity, user volume, or conversion economics make design quality directly affect business outcomes. Fintech and banking applications. Multi-step financial flows, account management, transaction handling, and security-conscious design all require proper UX work. Fintech UX failures cost real money for users and damage trust at scale.

Booking and reservation platforms. Hospitality booking flows, restaurant reservations, healthcare appointment systems, and event booking platforms all depend on usability for conversion. Small UX improvements in booking flows produce substantial revenue impact.

B2B SaaS products. Multi-user systems with role-based access, complex workflows, and ongoing user relationships require sustained UX attention. SaaS retention correlates strongly with usability quality.

Government and enterprise digital services. Sites and applications serving large user bases with mandatory tasks (compliance, regulatory, internal operations) require accessibility, usability, and Arabic-language UX work that ad-hoc approaches don't deliver.

Related Services

You might also need

Have a project in mind?

Strategy sessions are free and run 60-90 minutes.

Call +966 55 800 4278
FAQs

Common questions about UI/UX Design

What's the difference between UI design and UX design?

UX design is the broader discipline covering user research, information architecture, user flows, and the structural decisions about how the product works. UI design is the visual and interactive layer — the specific design of components, layouts, and visual system. Most projects need both, and the disciplines overlap in execution. UI design without UX work produces pretty interfaces that don't work behaviourally. UX work without UI design produces functional structures without the visual craft that users actually experience.

How long does UI/UX design take?

A focused UI/UX engagement for a single user flow or feature typically takes three to six weeks. Standard product design including research, wireframes, and visual design for a complete product runs eight to sixteen weeks. Comprehensive design system development with extensive component libraries and documentation can run twelve to twenty-four weeks. Timeline depends on research scope, stakeholder availability for review, and how much usability testing the project supports.

Do you handle Arabic RTL UI/UX design properly?

Yes. Arabic RTL UX work involves more than flipping layouts — it covers Arabic typography selection, component behaviour that adapts to reading direction, form field ordering appropriate for Arabic input, calendar and number formatting conventions, and the cultural calibration that makes interfaces feel native to Saudi users rather than translated from international references. We design Arabic and English versions in parallel rather than treating Arabic as adapted from English.

How much does UI/UX design cost?

Focused UI/UX engagements typically range from SAR 18,000 to SAR 60,000 for single-flow or feature redesigns. Standard product design covering complete products runs SAR 50,000 to SAR 180,000 depending on scope and research depth. Comprehensive design system development with extensive component libraries usually ranges from SAR 80,000 to SAR 250,000. Ongoing design retainers for product teams shipping continuously start around SAR 12,000 monthly. We provide fixed quotes after the discovery phase.

Call WhatsApp Get Quote