Insurance Rewamp

A Quicker and simpler Insurance for 14M+ users.

A step into easy Insurance

Role
Product Designer

Sector
Fintech

Organisation
Easypaisa

Logo

About Project

Rebuilt Easypaisa’s insurance experience from the ground up — turning a confusing, underused feature into a trusted marketplace where millions can compare, subscribe, and manage plans in just a few taps.

Role: Product Designer
Fintech
B2C
App design

The problem

Easypaisa’s insurance experience didn’t fail because of the product — it failed because of how it was delivered. Most users didn’t understand what they were buying, got no confirmation after subscribing, and had no clue how to file a claim.

The Challenges

We weren’t redesigning a screen — we were rebuilding a broken system wrapped in mistrust, data gaps, and user apathy.

Constraints
🧱 Zero backend alignment
📉 No behavioral data
🗂️ Fragmented insurer logic
🕵️ Mistrust by default
🙅 Low insurance literacy

The Opportunity

We saw this as an opportunity to build Pakistan’s first digital insurance Marketplace — one that’s trustworthy, user-centric, and scalable.

Goal
🔁 Improve retention

🧭 Simplify discovery

✅ Increase activation

🧑‍💻 Make claims and coverage understandable

The Impact

We didn’t just clean up a broken experience — we rebuilt insurance as a trusted, usable, and scalable product inside Easypaisa.
The result? Clearer decisions, fewer complaints, real revenue, and product adoption at scale.

0 %

YOY growth
We unlocked real adoption—driving a 57% increase in insurance collections through Easypaisa.

0 M+

PKR in total collection
Proving that when users understand insurance, they stay subscribed — and engaged.

0 %

Of enrollment target achieved
not by nudging harder, but by making the value obvious.

0 K

New users subscribed.
It kept users around longer, with fewer drop-offs and higher plan retention.

0 X

Growth in Insurance Subscriptions.
Once users understood what they were buying, they didn’t resist. They subscribed—and stayed.

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Plans launched.
Our modular flow scaled across partners, products, and new use cases with zero UI debt.

My Design Approach

I followed an 8-step UX process — from aligning with stakeholders and identifying user pain points to designing, testing, and handing off a scalable solution.

Planning & Alignment

Aligned with Product, Tech, and Business on goals, constraints, and success metrics.

Discovery & Context

Audited existing flows and data to identify drop-offs and usability gaps.

User & Market Research

Interviewed users, reviewed support logs, and benchmarked competitors.

Problem Framing

Defined key UX problems around trust, claims, and plan comprehension.

Experience Design

Designed modular flows, components, and plain-language content.

Testing & Validation

Tested core tasks and simplified flows based on real user feedback.

Technical Collaboration

Partnered with devs to build scalable flows and handle edge cases early.

Launch & Learn

Monitored live usage, tracked performance, and refined post-launch.

Logo

What started as a broken experience became one of Easypaisa’s most trusted and adopted features — thanks to a UX process built around clarity, trust, and scale.

Title

These 8 steps formed a complete UX loop — helping us move from problem to solution with clarity, collaboration, and user validation at every stage.

#1
Planning & Alignment

I kicked off the project by sitting down with Product, Business, and Tech to get everything on the table — goals, blockers, user pain, and technical limitations.

Together, we mapped a design plan that balanced impact with feasibility — making sure everyone moved forward on the same page

#2
Discovery & context

Started by digging into the existing product to understand where users were getting lost, what wasn’t working, and why trust was breaking down. Through heuristic evaluation, journey mapping, and real usage data, we uncovered critical friction points — from buried actions and unclear plan info to major drop-offs after subscription.

#2.1
Heuristic Evaluation

Mapped the full insurance journey to find what was slowing users down — unclear CTAs, hidden claim access, and overly long subscription steps.

#2.2
Data Analysis

Reviewed funnel data and heatmaps to find key drop-off points — most users bounced after viewing plan details or never returned post-subscription.

#2.3
Journey Mapping

Deconstructed each step from discovery to unsubscribe — exposing dead zones, high-friction tasks, and moments that made users quit.

#3
User & Market Research

We interviewed users and analyzed support logs to understand the real friction: most didn’t know if they were covered, what their plan included, or how to file a claim. They weren’t confused by the UI — they lacked trust in the product.

#3.1
How We Researched

We spoke to users, visited shops, listened to agents, and analyzed real complaints. Our goal was to understand not just the interface gaps — but the cultural, behavioral, and systemic reasons people don’t trust or buy insurance.

Multi-Stakeholder Approach

Explored how insurance is sold, misunderstood, and abandoned — across users, agents, and support.

Geographic Coverage: Karachi, Islamabad, Peshawar and Lahore

Focus: To unpack why insurance lacks trust, how people self-insure through savings, and what drives or blocks digital adoption.

 User Interviews & Focus Groups

  • 40 interviews with Easypaisa users (active, churned, and never-insured)
  • 20-person focus group to test assumptions and observe sentiment
  • Fieldwork conducted at mobile shops, local homes, and retail points
  • Covered four key segments — from digital-savvy users to low-literacy and first-timers

 Insurance Agents Interviews

  • 20 interviews with on-ground insurance agents and Easypaisa shop retailers
  • Explored real sales tactics, user objections, and misconceptions
  • Identified a major gap between what agents are trained to sell and what users actually understand
  • Uncovered informal selling behaviors, incentive pressures, and trust breakdowns

 User Interviews & Focus Groups

  • 40 interviews with Easypaisa users (active, churned, and never-insured)
  • 20-person focus group to test assumptions and observe sentiment
  • Fieldwork conducted at mobile shops, local homes, and retail points
  • Covered four key segments — from digital-savvy users to low-literacy and first-timers
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User Interviews
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Agent Interviews
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Support ticket analyzed.
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Major Cities Covered

#3.2
What We Were Looking For

We set out to answer two things: why users don’t buy insurance, and why they don’t trust it once they do. By mapping drop-offs, interviewing skeptics, and comparing competitor flows, we uncovered the hidden blockers behind low adoption and high churn.

Testing & Validation

We set out to explore how people perceive insurance, especially digital insurance, and what breaks or builds their trust.

  • Do users think of insurance as protection — or savings?
  • What past experiences shape their attitudes?
  • How much do word of mouth and cultural narratives influence trust?
  • Does trust differ between digital and agent-led enrollment?

Identifying Moments of Confusion or Drop-Off

We wanted to map where people lose clarity, confidence, or interest — across the entire journey.

  • Which points in onboarding create hesitation or misunderstanding?
  • Do people know when they’re being enrolled or charged?
  • What makes someone abandon a policy or silently churn?
  • Are claim processes clear enough to complete without help?

Exploring the Gap Between Selling and Understanding

We aimed to understand how insurance is positioned by agents — and how that compares to what users actually understand or expect.

  • What do agents focus on when selling insurance?
  • Are users making informed decisions—or acting on assumptions?
  • Are selling practices consistent across cities and shop types?
  • What role do incentives play in shaping how insurance is pitched?

Uncovering What Could Shift Mindsets

We wanted to explore what would need to change — in product, language, or delivery — for insurance to feel more relevant and valuable.

  • What framing or terminology resonates with users?
  • Would personalization increase relevance and perceived value?
  • Do community- or family-based models feel more trustworthy?
  • When is the right time to introduce insurance to a user?

#3.3
What We Learned

This wasn’t about usability. It was about trust, misaligned expectations, and missing context. Users confused insurance with savings, didn’t understand claims, feared it was non-Islamic, and ignored standalone offers. Adoption only came when insurance was embedded, explained, and earned.

Insurance = Savings in Users' Minds
. Critical Barrier

73% of users expected insurance to return their money like a savings account. This fundamental misconception created unrealistic expectations and disappointment

"I thought after 2 years, I'd get my money back plus some profit. Why would I pay for something I might never use?"

Terms like “coverage” and “premium” were completely foreign. Users understood “bachao” (save) and “paisa wapis” (money back) but not protection concepts.

Field Agents Poisoned the Well
. Trust Crisis

68% of respondents had negative experiences with traditional insurance agents—from silent account deductions to fake policy promises.

"The agent promised my accident policy would cover everything. When I had a bike accident, they said, This type of injury isn't covered.' I felt completely fooled."

This created a default assumption that all insurance is a scam, making digital adoption exponentially harder.

Claims Process = Black Hole
.Experience Gap

90% of users had no idea how to file a claim, and 0% confidence in getting timely resolution.

"My father had health insurance for 3 years. When he needed surgery, we didn't know where to start. The hospital said 'call this number' but no one picked up. We paid everything ourselves."

The lack of claims transparency made insurance feel like “paying for nothing.”

Context Drives Everything
. Adoption Key

Standalone insurance had extremely low engagement, but contextual offers during money transfers saw significantly higher interest.

"I never think about insurance when I'm just browsing the app. But when my phone got stolen last month, I was like 'I wish I had some protection.' Too late then."

Users don’t shop for insurance – they react to immediate vulnerability moments.

Halal vs Haram Confusion
. Cultural Blocker

45% of users avoided insurance due to religious concerns, yet only 12% knew about Takaful (Shariah-compliant insurance).

"My father says insurance is haram because it's gambling with life. But I need protection for my family."

The lack of claims transparency made insurance feel like “paying for nothing.”

Every Rupee Needs Justification
. Adoption Barrier

Even premiums as low as 50-100 PKR felt expensive without immediate, tangible value. Users mentally compared insurance costs to daily essentials.

"100 rupees? That's my lunch money for 1 day. What am I getting today for this 100 rupees? Nothing I can see or touch."

80% of users wanted free trials or “money-back guarantees” to experience value before committing to ongoing payments.

The Core Revelation
. Key Value

Insurance in Pakistan isn’t just a product problem – it’s a trust, education, and cultural navigation challenge. Success required rebuilding the entire concept from the ground up, not just digitizing existing processes.

Our biggest insight: Users needed to experience insurance value before they could understand insurance concepts.

#4
Problem Framing

Designing for insurance in this market meant dealing with more than UX bugs. We had to work around deep trust issues, low awareness, price sensitivity, and religious hesitation — all while keeping the experience simple enough for someone with low literacy and no digital history. These weren’t edge cases — they were the baseline. And every design decision had to respect that reality.

Problem Interconnection

Wrong Mental Model
Savings expectation
Agent Misinformation
False promises
Claims Failure
Process confusion
Cultural Guilt
Religious concerns
Crisis Decisions
Reactive purchasing
Value Invisibility
No tangible benefits
Negative Spread
Social influence
Standalone Friction
Separate purchase decision
Missing Incentives
No behavioral rewards

Success Metrics

Expectation Alignment
Pre-purchase understanding measured through comprehension tests and realistic scenarios
Trust Score
NPS improvement tracking customer confidence in promises made vs delivered
Cultural Comfort
Religious compliance measured through community feedback and adoption rates
Value Articulation
Unprompted benefit explanation ability in customer interviews post-purchase
Claims Confidence
Process understanding measured before crisis hits - proactive education effectiveness
Proactive Engagement
Non-crisis considerations tracking - planning mindset vs panic purchasing patterns
Embedded Adoption
Contextual purchase rates during natural buying moments vs standalone sales
Human Satisfaction
Support interaction quality ratings during high-stress claim situations
Behavioral Incentives
Reward engagement rates - customers actively participating in risk reduction programs

Design Principles

Transparency
Visual processes showing exactly what happens during claims - no hidden steps
Immediate Value
Day-one benefits that customers can see and use before they ever need to make a claim
Cultural Integration
Religious compliance guidance built into every product decision and family involvement tools
Context Awareness
Right time engagement during natural purchase moments instead of interruption-based sales
Experience Over Education
Right time engagement during natural purchase moments instead of interruption-based sales
Trust Through Accountability
Transparent delivery on every promise made - tracked, measured, and publicly visible
Embedded Integration
Contextual offering within existing user journeys rather than separate insurance shopping
Human-Digital Hybrid
Support when needed during complex decisions and emotional moments with seamless handoffs
Behavioral Rewards
Incentive alignment making good decisions profitable and engaging for customers

Strategic Opportunities

Trial Period
30-day money-back guarantee with full refund - let users experience protection risk-free
Day-One Benefits
Instant perks: discounts, cashback, or digital services activated immediately upon purchase
Freemium Protection
Basic coverage free, premium features paid - show value before asking for money
Takaful Options
Prominent Islamic insurance alternatives with clear halal certification
Community Validation
Social proof from community members who use insurance while maintaining religious values
Family Decision Support
Tools to involve family/elders in insurance decisions - shared
E-commerce Integration
Product protection offered at checkout - relevant, timely, valuable
Payment App Embedding
Insurance options within digital wallets during high-value transactions
Banking Integration
Insurance suggestions during loan applications, large withdrawals, account openings

#5
Experience Design

Armed with the constraints we surfaced, we began shaping the experience — focusing on the exact moments where users got confused, felt misled, or dropped off. From claims to onboarding to in-app education, we restructured key flows, explored new interaction patterns, and prototyped ways to build trust — not just through visuals, but through timing, clarity, and transparency.

#6
Testing & Validation

We put the redesigned flows in front of real users. We weren’t just checking if buttons worked; we wanted to know if people finally understood what they were buying, how to claim, and whether they could trust it.
Some things landed. Others didn’t. But every test helped us close the gap between what we meant to design and what people actually experienced.

#6.1
Task Completion & Time to Success

We tested how quickly and accurately users could complete key tasks like enrolling, understanding coverage, and initiating claims — without help.
The goal: reduce hesitation, increase clarity, and make insurance feel effortless.

#6
Eye-Tracking & Usability Scoring

We ran eye-tracking tests to see what caught attention, what was ignored, and where users hesitated. Paired with a System Usability Score (SUS), this gave us a quantified view of how intuitive the experience really was.

#3.3
Competitor-Benchmark Audience Testing

We tested our redesigned flow with users who regularly use competitor platforms — major wallets and bank apps — to see how well our experience translated across habits and expectations.
These users brought real-world context and comparison into the test, making it clear whether our solution was actually simpler or just different.

I let you peek under the hood and showed you design process . Now, see the work results

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Component Liubaraty

Insurance center

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Subscription Flow

3 simple views

File a Claim

3 simple views

Unsubscrbe

3 simple views