Live Preview (Coming Soon)
Eco-Addis Mobile — Super App for Addis Ababa
Title
Eco-Addis — A super-app for e-commerce, food delivery and ride-hailing in Addis Ababa
My Role
Lead UX/UI Designer
Team
1 Product Manager, 1 UI Designer, 1 UX Researcher, 2 Developers
Timeline
5 Months
Project Type
Personal / Client
Tools Used
Figma, FigJam, Google Forms, Maze
Problem Statement
Addis Ababa's rapidly growing urban population faces fragmented digital commerce experiences — separate apps for shopping, food delivery, and transportation. Vendors lack affordable digital storefronts, while consumers juggle multiple platforms with inconsistent UX. Eco-Addis was designed to solve this with a single, unified super-app ecosystem tailored specifically to Addis Ababa's urban lifestyle — supporting Ethiopian Birr (ETB), Amharic context, and local business categories.
Users & Pain Points
Who are the users?
Urban Addis Ababa residents aged 18–40 — students, professionals, and small business owners who are mobile-first consumers.
What are their goals?
Shop for products, food, and services in one place|Find nearby restaurants and get food delivered quickly|Order affordable rides without switching apps|Sell products or run a vendor shop digitally|Discover local businesses through video and stories
Pain points
•
No single app serving e-commerce, food delivery, and rides in the Ethiopian market|Existing global apps (Jumia, Uber) lack local language support and local business inventory|Small vendors have no accessible digital storefront|Currency and payment flows are not localized (no ETB, no local delivery logic)|Distrust of complicated onboarding — users drop off before first purchase
•
Disputes over draw fairness — no verifiable random selection
•
No single place to view contribution history, remaining rounds, or upcoming draws
•
Organizers overwhelmed managing payments and member communications manually
•
No formal way to submit a cancellation or special request
No single app serving e-commerce, food delivery, and rides in the Ethiopian market|Existing global apps (Jumia, Uber) lack local language support and local business inventory|Small vendors have no accessible digital storefront|Currency and payment flows are not localized (no ETB, no local delivery logic)|Distrust of complicated onboarding — users drop off before first purchase
"I want to see my payment history and the draw results in one place — not scroll through a WhatsApp group."

Process & Methods
Goals
Understand how Addis Ababa residents currently shop, eat, and travel — and where digital tools fail them
Methods
•
User interviews with Addis residents across income groups|Competitor analysis: Jumia Ethiopia, ride apps, informal WhatsApp commerce|Card sorting to determine navigation structure for a multi-service app|Contextual inquiry at local markets and food spots (Bole, Saris, Merkato)
Key Findings & Insights
Users strongly prefer a single app over switching — super-app model validated|ETB pricing and Amharic map labels are trust signals, not just nice-to-haves|Flash deals and time-limited offers drive impulse purchases in food delivery|Vendors want easy onboarding — category/subcategory industry selection must be simple|Social features (stories, video Watch tab) increase time-in-app and discovery|Ride-hailing users want saved frequent destinations and trip history at a glance
Final Solution
→
A clean locally-rooted mobile super-app with five core verticals: Market Place (product discovery, vendor shops, wishlist, reviews, flash deals); Food Delivery (restaurant pages, special offers, basket, checkout, order tracking); Eco Ride (map-based ride ordering, delivery mode, trip history, Eco Miles loyalty); Watch (vertical video feed for business promotion and discovery); and Me (user profile, my products, wallet, shop management, referrals). Design uses amber/golden yellow primary, dark navy secondary, ETB currency throughout, and real Addis Ababa addresses and Amharic map context.
Impact / Results
•
Onboarding completion rate target: >80%|Time to first order target: <3 minutes|Task success rate (find and add item to cart) target: >90%|Vendor registration completion target: >70%|SUS Score target: >80
Lessons Learned
Designing a super-app requires ruthless information architecture — the hardest challenge was keeping five product verticals discoverable without overwhelming the home screen|Localization is a UX feature not an afterthought — real Addis Ababa streets, ETB pricing, and Ethiopian food context in banners built immediate trust|Social commerce is underutilized in African markets — the Watch tab and Stories features were strong discovery and retention mechanisms|Vendors are users too — the vendor registration and boost flows needed as much design care as the consumer-facing shopping experience
© 2026 Nahom Girma. Designed & Hosted with 🦾 on
Live Preview (Coming Soon)
Eco-Addis Mobile — Super App for Addis Ababa
Title
Eco-Addis — A super-app for e-commerce, food delivery and ride-hailing in Addis Ababa
My Role
Lead UX/UI Designer
Team
1 Product Manager, 1 UI Designer, 1 UX Researcher, 2 Developers
Timeline
5 Months
Project Type
Personal / Client
Tools Used
Figma, FigJam, Google Forms, Maze
Problem Statement
Addis Ababa's rapidly growing urban population faces fragmented digital commerce experiences — separate apps for shopping, food delivery, and transportation. Vendors lack affordable digital storefronts, while consumers juggle multiple platforms with inconsistent UX. Eco-Addis was designed to solve this with a single, unified super-app ecosystem tailored specifically to Addis Ababa's urban lifestyle — supporting Ethiopian Birr (ETB), Amharic context, and local business categories.
Users & Pain Points
Who are the users?
Urban Addis Ababa residents aged 18–40 — students, professionals, and small business owners who are mobile-first consumers.
What are their goals?
Shop for products, food, and services in one place|Find nearby restaurants and get food delivered quickly|Order affordable rides without switching apps|Sell products or run a vendor shop digitally|Discover local businesses through video and stories
Pain points
•
No single app serving e-commerce, food delivery, and rides in the Ethiopian market|Existing global apps (Jumia, Uber) lack local language support and local business inventory|Small vendors have no accessible digital storefront|Currency and payment flows are not localized (no ETB, no local delivery logic)|Distrust of complicated onboarding — users drop off before first purchase
•
Disputes over draw fairness — no verifiable random selection
•
No single place to view contribution history, remaining rounds, or upcoming draws
•
Organizers overwhelmed managing payments and member communications manually
•
No formal way to submit a cancellation or special request
No single app serving e-commerce, food delivery, and rides in the Ethiopian market|Existing global apps (Jumia, Uber) lack local language support and local business inventory|Small vendors have no accessible digital storefront|Currency and payment flows are not localized (no ETB, no local delivery logic)|Distrust of complicated onboarding — users drop off before first purchase
"I want to see my payment history and the draw results in one place — not scroll through a WhatsApp group."

Process & Methods
Goals
Understand how Addis Ababa residents currently shop, eat, and travel — and where digital tools fail them
Methods
•
User interviews with Addis residents across income groups|Competitor analysis: Jumia Ethiopia, ride apps, informal WhatsApp commerce|Card sorting to determine navigation structure for a multi-service app|Contextual inquiry at local markets and food spots (Bole, Saris, Merkato)
Key Findings & Insights
Users strongly prefer a single app over switching — super-app model validated|ETB pricing and Amharic map labels are trust signals, not just nice-to-haves|Flash deals and time-limited offers drive impulse purchases in food delivery|Vendors want easy onboarding — category/subcategory industry selection must be simple|Social features (stories, video Watch tab) increase time-in-app and discovery|Ride-hailing users want saved frequent destinations and trip history at a glance
Final Solution
→
A clean locally-rooted mobile super-app with five core verticals: Market Place (product discovery, vendor shops, wishlist, reviews, flash deals); Food Delivery (restaurant pages, special offers, basket, checkout, order tracking); Eco Ride (map-based ride ordering, delivery mode, trip history, Eco Miles loyalty); Watch (vertical video feed for business promotion and discovery); and Me (user profile, my products, wallet, shop management, referrals). Design uses amber/golden yellow primary, dark navy secondary, ETB currency throughout, and real Addis Ababa addresses and Amharic map context.
Impact / Results
•
Onboarding completion rate target: >80%|Time to first order target: <3 minutes|Task success rate (find and add item to cart) target: >90%|Vendor registration completion target: >70%|SUS Score target: >80
Lessons Learned
Designing a super-app requires ruthless information architecture — the hardest challenge was keeping five product verticals discoverable without overwhelming the home screen|Localization is a UX feature not an afterthought — real Addis Ababa streets, ETB pricing, and Ethiopian food context in banners built immediate trust|Social commerce is underutilized in African markets — the Watch tab and Stories features were strong discovery and retention mechanisms|Vendors are users too — the vendor registration and boost flows needed as much design care as the consumer-facing shopping experience
© 2026 Nahom Girma. Designed & Hosted with 🦾 on
Live Preview (Coming Soon)
Eco-Addis Mobile — Super App for Addis Ababa
Title
Eco-Addis — A super-app for e-commerce, food delivery and ride-hailing in Addis Ababa
My Role
Lead UX/UI Designer
Team
1 Product Manager, 1 UI Designer, 1 UX Researcher, 2 Developers
Timeline
5 Months
Project Type
Personal / Client
Tools Used
Figma, FigJam, Google Forms, Maze
Problem Statement
Addis Ababa's rapidly growing urban population faces fragmented digital commerce experiences — separate apps for shopping, food delivery, and transportation. Vendors lack affordable digital storefronts, while consumers juggle multiple platforms with inconsistent UX. Eco-Addis was designed to solve this with a single, unified super-app ecosystem tailored specifically to Addis Ababa's urban lifestyle — supporting Ethiopian Birr (ETB), Amharic context, and local business categories.
Users & Pain Points
Who are the users?
Urban Addis Ababa residents aged 18–40 — students, professionals, and small business owners who are mobile-first consumers.
What are their goals?
Shop for products, food, and services in one place|Find nearby restaurants and get food delivered quickly|Order affordable rides without switching apps|Sell products or run a vendor shop digitally|Discover local businesses through video and stories
Pain points
•
No single app serving e-commerce, food delivery, and rides in the Ethiopian market|Existing global apps (Jumia, Uber) lack local language support and local business inventory|Small vendors have no accessible digital storefront|Currency and payment flows are not localized (no ETB, no local delivery logic)|Distrust of complicated onboarding — users drop off before first purchase
•
Disputes over draw fairness — no verifiable random selection
•
No single place to view contribution history, remaining rounds, or upcoming draws
•
Organizers overwhelmed managing payments and member communications manually
•
No formal way to submit a cancellation or special request
No single app serving e-commerce, food delivery, and rides in the Ethiopian market|Existing global apps (Jumia, Uber) lack local language support and local business inventory|Small vendors have no accessible digital storefront|Currency and payment flows are not localized (no ETB, no local delivery logic)|Distrust of complicated onboarding — users drop off before first purchase
"I want to see my payment history and the draw results in one place — not scroll through a WhatsApp group."

Process & Methods
Goals
Understand how Addis Ababa residents currently shop, eat, and travel — and where digital tools fail them
Methods
•
User interviews with Addis residents across income groups|Competitor analysis: Jumia Ethiopia, ride apps, informal WhatsApp commerce|Card sorting to determine navigation structure for a multi-service app|Contextual inquiry at local markets and food spots (Bole, Saris, Merkato)
Key Findings & Insights
Users strongly prefer a single app over switching — super-app model validated|ETB pricing and Amharic map labels are trust signals, not just nice-to-haves|Flash deals and time-limited offers drive impulse purchases in food delivery|Vendors want easy onboarding — category/subcategory industry selection must be simple|Social features (stories, video Watch tab) increase time-in-app and discovery|Ride-hailing users want saved frequent destinations and trip history at a glance
Final Solution
→
A clean locally-rooted mobile super-app with five core verticals: Market Place (product discovery, vendor shops, wishlist, reviews, flash deals); Food Delivery (restaurant pages, special offers, basket, checkout, order tracking); Eco Ride (map-based ride ordering, delivery mode, trip history, Eco Miles loyalty); Watch (vertical video feed for business promotion and discovery); and Me (user profile, my products, wallet, shop management, referrals). Design uses amber/golden yellow primary, dark navy secondary, ETB currency throughout, and real Addis Ababa addresses and Amharic map context.
Impact / Results
•
Onboarding completion rate target: >80%|Time to first order target: <3 minutes|Task success rate (find and add item to cart) target: >90%|Vendor registration completion target: >70%|SUS Score target: >80
Lessons Learned
Designing a super-app requires ruthless information architecture — the hardest challenge was keeping five product verticals discoverable without overwhelming the home screen|Localization is a UX feature not an afterthought — real Addis Ababa streets, ETB pricing, and Ethiopian food context in banners built immediate trust|Social commerce is underutilized in African markets — the Watch tab and Stories features were strong discovery and retention mechanisms|Vendors are users too — the vendor registration and boost flows needed as much design care as the consumer-facing shopping experience
© 2026 Nahom Girma. Designed & Hosted with 🦾 on