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What I Look For When Reviewing UI Workflows

What I Look For When Reviewing UI Workflows cover

I have seen UI Workflows treated like a formality and like a real craft. One produces green statuses, the other produces confidence people can explain.

When I review work in UI Workflows, I am not only asking whether the ticket appears complete. I am asking whether the evidence, code behavior, and surrounding assumptions fit together tightly enough that I would trust the result after release. It gets expensive when every screen works in isolation, but the full journey breaks when state travels between steps.

The review becomes useful when it tests the story behind the result, not just the result itself.

The First Signals I Look For

  • Does the implementation clearly support multi-step journeys, transitions, and the points where users hesitate or recover?
  • Is the risky path visible, or has it been left to assumption?
  • Would another reviewer understand the user impact without extra verbal explanation?

Questions I Ask Before I Call It Ready

I ask what changed outside the happy path, what happens under interruption, and how the team would know it failed in real use. With UI Workflows, those questions matter because a checkout wizard that saves progress on step two and quietly loses it on step four.

I also want to know whether the work can be explained to designers, product managers, and front-end engineers without hand-waving. If the answer needs too much translation, there is often still a hidden gap.

What Good Evidence Looks Like to Me

Good evidence is easy to point to and hard to misunderstand. For this topic I am looking for something like end-to-end walkthroughs with real user choices, backtracking, and interrupted sessions.

I hold the review when the result depends on a promise nobody verified, when a negative path was skipped because it seemed unlikely, or when the notes only show activity instead of meaning. That is usually when confidence becomes visible enough to share, not just feel.