This page captures the content priority on every revenue-critical screen in DomiDo. The examination evaluated each screen for the prominence of the primary action, the visibility of price, the clarity of status, the priority of above-fold content, and the overall information density. The current design satisfies every finding. The unifying rule is that the next decision the user has to make should sit above the fold, that price should be visible whenever a purchase decision is in play, that status should be unambiguous, and that secondary information should collapse rather than crowd the primary action.
The Home Dashboard surfaces a "Your Activity" section above the hero for returning users — active orders, in-progress designs, and pre-orders surface before any marketing content. First-time visitors see the rotating hero (each hero highlights a use-case category the platform enables) followed by three quick-action cards: Upload Your File, Describe Your Design, and Browse Catalogue. Trending designs from the gallery sit below the quick-actions. The hero carousel pauses on hover and focus and has a play and pause control.
The Mode Selector places the two creation modes at the top of the screen. The AI-mode card states the total credit cost (around thirteen credits) so a user knows up front whether their balance covers the pipeline; if the balance is low an amber warning appears on the card, and the user can still proceed with informed consent. A "Resume your design" card surfaces an in-progress AI-mode design with one tap to continue.
The AI Prompt screen lets the text-area input dominate. Example prompt chips reduce the recall burden of "what to write". The reference-image upload sits next to the text area. The credit balance and contextual cost display ("you have fifteen credits, this will use thirteen") sit adjacent to the Generate button — the user never has to recall what they have or what it will cost.
The current projection preview occupies the top of the viewport. The Approve and Regenerate controls sit immediately below. The eight-thumbnail progress grid sits next. The auto-generate-remaining-views accelerator sits above the fold once the first projection is approved — previously buried, now prominent. An explanatory banner at workflow start explains why eight views are needed. On the 3D Model Generation screen three outcome-based options (High Quality recommended, Fast, Detailed) replace the previous infrastructure-named providers. Each option shows the expected timing and the credit cost. The Create 3D Model call-to-action is the primary action.
On Design Review the price and the sticky "Add to Cart — [price]" call-to-action sit above the fold. The 3D viewer occupies forty per cent of the viewport on mobile (reduced from fifty per cent) so the price is visible without scrolling. The Bill of Materials summary, the assembly step count, and the build time sit immediately below the viewer. Secondary information — the solver selector, the re-optimise history, the detailed Bill of Materials — collapses into expandable sections so a non-expert user is not overwhelmed.
On Catalogue Product Detail the 3D preview occupies the top portion of the screen. Parametric size sliders (width, depth, height) recalculate price and block count in real time. The price and the sticky purchase call-to-action sit above the fold; the estimated build time and the difficulty rating follow. The augmented-reality placement option appears as a secondary call-to-action.
The Cart lists items with thumbnails, quantities, and prices. The subtotal, value-added tax, shipping, and total sit just below. A promotional-code field is below the total. The full-width "Proceed to Checkout — [total]" call-to-action is sticky on mobile.
On the Order Confirmation and Pre-order Confirmation the order or pre-order number, the confirmation icon, and the estimated delivery or ship date sit at the top. On the pre-order confirmation the "card has been verified but will not be charged until your order ships" notice is the most prominent element after the confirmation icon. The "Start Assembly" link to the Assembly Viewer follows. "Continue Shopping" sits at the bottom.
Gallery Browse keeps the search bar (text, voice, image) at the top. The curated tabs (Trending, Newest, Most Purchased, Staff Picks) sit immediately below. The masonry grid follows with cards carrying image, title, designer name, and social proof (like count). On Gallery Design Detail the 3D viewer occupies the top of the viewport, the "Add to Cart — [price]" call-to-action sits at the top of the content area, sticky on scroll — previously at position eight of the content hierarchy, now elevated to first. Designer attribution and the Follow control sit next. The description, tags, and social actions (like, comment, share, save to collection) follow. The comment thread is below.
My Designs shows a grid of cards with thumbnails. Each card carries the design name, the status badge, and the date. The status badges use the unified semantic palette: green for Ready, blue for Processing, amber for AI In Progress, purple for Published, red for Failed or Moderation Rejected, and a subdued tone for Ordered. The AI-In-Progress badge carries a Resume button. My Orders cards carry a design thumbnail (so a user recognises orders rather than recalling order numbers), the order number, the date, the status badge, and a tracking link. Pre-orders sit in a separate section with the "Card Verified — Not Charged" status. The fifteen-day return window countdown appears on delivered orders with a "Request Return" link. Each Pre-order Management card surfaces the estimated ship date, the "Card Verified — Not Charged" status, and a Cancel control. A "Card approaching expiry" notification surfaces seven days before expiry with an "Update Payment Method" call-to-action.
On Return Request the item-selection checkboxes are at the top. The reason dropdown sits next. The optional details text area follows. The return-window countdown ("Eight days remaining") is prominently displayed. The Submit Return call-to-action is sticky at the bottom. On Return Status the six-step timeline (Requested, Label Sent, Shipped, Received, Inspected and Graded, Refund Processed) occupies the top. The label download link and the expected refund amount sit immediately below. A Dispute control appears after grading. Settings groups profile (avatar from Open Authorisation, name), subscription summary (current tier, credit balance), notifications, and General Data Protection Regulation controls (Export My Data, Delete Account). Subscription shows the current tier highlighted, the credit balance progress bar, a thirty-day usage history chart, the four-tier comparison table, and the monthly reset date.
The Overview shows four metric cards (Orders Today, Revenue, Pipeline Success, Active Users) at the top, the revenue trend and orders-by-category charts in the middle, and the quick-alerts section at the bottom. Progressive widget loading means the metric cards appear first, the tables next, the charts last — the dashboard is never entirely blank. The other twelve admin screens each follow their own information hierarchy with the most-used controls at the top and the supporting information below. Every chart has a data-table alternative.
The information-hierarchy examination identified twenty-two issues, three at High severity. The dominant theme was the prominence of pricing and purchase calls-to-action on Design Review and Gallery Design Detail (previously below the fold), the absence of pre-order distinction before commitment, and the lack of total-cost display on the Mode-Selector AI card. Every issue is resolved.