
Paysilo Case Study
Designing Trust Into Every Transaction
In Cameroon, mobile money was everywhere, but using it was messy. People juggled apps, spreadsheets, and agent visits just to send or manage payments.
I worked with Paysilo to design a simple, mobile-first platform that brought everything together, cross-network transfers, bulk payouts, and scheduled payments tailored for local users.
Details in this case study have been generalized to respect confidentiality.
Overview
Paysilo is a mobile-first fintech platform launching in Cameroon, enabling seamless cross-network mobile money transfers, bulk payments, and scheduled transactions for individuals and SMEs. By applying a design thinking approach, I helped Paysilo uncover key user pain points around fragmented payment workflows and low digital trust.
As a result, Paysilo is moving forward with a validated MVP experience, equipped with intuitive interfaces, localized UX, and core features that reduce friction and support financial inclusion.
My role
UI / UX Designer – leading UX research, ideation, wireframing, prototyping, and developer collaboration.
The Problem
Managing digital payments in Cameroon is more difficult than it should be.
With millions relying on mobile money for everyday transactions, users are forced to juggle multiple apps, manual records, and inconsistent agent services to send money, schedule transfers, or run payroll. Small businesses and NGOs often depend on spreadsheets and offline methods, leading to frequent errors, delays, and compliance issues.
Without a unified system, there’s no reliable way to automate, track, or simplify payments, making it hard for individuals and SMEs to operate efficiently or grow confidently in a mobile-first economy.
User Research & Journey Mapping
I conducted user interviews and written surveys with individual users and SME operators in Cameroon to better understand their pain points around digital payments. I used these insights to create detailed personas and customer journey maps in FigJam, which helped visualize real-life usage patterns and pain points.
These journey maps were instrumental in identifying moments of friction like CSV upload confusion or network trust gaps and laid the foundation for design workshops and stakeholder presentations. This helped align the team and drive design decisions rooted in user needs.
" Switching between apps just to pay people is annoying. I wish everything was in one place "
"We use Excel sheets and send payments manually. It’s easy to mess something up, especially when the team grows."
" Switching between apps just to pay people is annoying. I wish everything was in one place "
Grounding the Design in Real Needs
Conceptualization
Wireframe 1
Wireframe 1
Putting the design to the test
Seeing Results
I’ve managed to solve key usability and workflow issues for Paysilo’s core users—especially around cross-network transfers and bulk disbursements. The redesigned experience helped simplify complex tasks like CSV uploads and scheduled payments, reducing friction for both individual users and SME operators.
✅ 33% faster task completion for mobile money top-ups
📉 60% reduction in user errors during CSV uploads
🔁 80% task success rate after usability refinements
🧭 50% improvement in navigation efficiency across core flows
💬 100% of testers said they would use the app over their current process
Project Learnings
Designing for Paysilo taught me the importance of local context and user trust especially when working on fintech products in emerging markets. Users weren’t just looking for features they needed clarity, control, and confidence in every transaction.
I learned how to:
— Translate complex financial workflows into simple, mobile-first experiences
— Prioritize accessibility and language inclusivity in a culturally specific context
— Run lean user research and usability testing remotely, yet still gather high-value insights
— Collaborate cross-functionally with stakeholders, engineers, and non-designers to align quickly
— Create and maintain a scalable design system that streamlined developer handoff
Most of all, I realized that the simplest screens often take the deepest thinking—and designing for trust is just as important as designing for usability.
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Amulya
Product Designer
Bay Area, California