We step in when a product feels like a downsized desktop app — slow, cluttered, and unfit for gestures. The result: clean, responsive, and built for thumbs.
Users get lost and abandon key actions.
Re-mapped journeys to reduce dead ends.
Tap targets feel off
or too small.
Refined touch zones based
on platform guidelines.
Nothing feels responsive
or intuitive.
Rebuilt interaction feedback
to give immediate visual cues.
Text is too small
or hard to scan.
Adjusted typography scale
and spacing for legibility.
Design effort scales with logic, use cases, and states — not how many screens
you counted in Figma.
We didn't want a cookie-cutter solution, and Toimi understood that right away. They came back with ideas tailored exactly to our needs — creative, practical, and easy to scale.
Strong technical skills, but also patient in explaining things so everyone could follow. That balance made the whole process smooth.
Quick turnaround, clean work, good communication. Would recommend.
Working with Toimi felt straightforward and stress-free.
Didn’t find what you were looking for? Drop us a line at info@toimi.pro.
Cost depends on the number of screens, interaction complexity, research depth, platform targets, and whether the engagement includes prototyping and usability testing — no flat rate applies. A mobile app design for a life sciences manufacturer in Pearland's Lower Kirby District building a global partner data collection tool involves different scope than a consumer-facing app design for a local retail business near Shadow Creek Town Center. Exact pricing is discussed individually after reviewing your project brief.
A focused mobile app design engagement covering a defined set of screens and user flows typically takes 5 to 10 weeks. A full design project including UX research, information architecture, wireframes, and high-fidelity UI across iOS and Android platforms takes 10 to 16 weeks depending on complexity and stakeholder review cycles. Pearland businesses in life sciences and healthcare often have compliance and accessibility requirements that add definition work before visual design begins — we factor those into the timeline from the discovery phase so they do not surface as constraints after design decisions have already been made.
Life sciences and biotech companies in the Lower Kirby District building partner-facing research and data collection applications, energy and manufacturing firms along State Highway 288 developing field operations and reporting tools, healthcare providers serving Pearland's rapidly growing population creating patient-facing or clinical staff applications, and retail businesses near Pearland Town Center launching mobile commerce experiences are the most frequent clients. A mobile app used daily by Pearland field teams, research partners, or customers is only as effective as its interface — a poorly designed app generates support tickets, workarounds, and abandonment regardless of how well the backend architecture is built.
A complete mobile app design project covers user research and persona definition, user flow mapping, information architecture, wireframes, interactive prototype, high-fidelity visual design for iOS and Android platform conventions, a component library, and developer handover documentation with spacing, typography, color, and interaction specifications. For Pearland businesses serving Brazoria County's bilingual demographic, interface design for both English and Spanish — including text expansion handling and culturally appropriate visual conventions — is addressed at the wireframe stage rather than retrofitted into a finished design where bilingual requirements create layout problems that require redesigning completed screens.
Industrial and field apps — used by manufacturing technicians in the Lower Kirby District, energy field teams along State Highway 288, or laboratory staff at life sciences facilities — are operated under conditions that consumer app design conventions do not account for: gloved hands, direct sunlight, time pressure, and split attention between the device and a physical task or instrument. We design for those conditions specifically — larger touch targets, high-contrast interfaces, simplified navigation, and offline-first interaction patterns — grounded in research about how your Pearland field users actually work rather than how a typical smartphone user browses a consumer application.
We design to iOS Human Interface Guidelines and Android Material Design specifications as platform baselines, adapting visual style to your brand while maintaining the interaction patterns users on each platform expect. For Pearland businesses deploying on both iOS and Android — common in life sciences and manufacturing organizations with mixed device fleets — we produce platform-specific design variants rather than a single design applied to both platforms. The differences between Apple and Google interaction conventions are significant enough that a single-design approach produces a substandard experience on at least one platform regardless of how well the shared design is executed.
You work with a dedicated UX researcher, mobile UI designer, and project manager throughout the engagement. We use structured stages — research, information architecture, wireframes, visual design, prototype, developer handover — with documented approval checkpoints at each phase. For Pearland clients with product, operations, and executive stakeholders involved in design reviews — common in life sciences and manufacturing organizations with distinct perspectives on user interface requirements — we run consolidated feedback sessions so input is gathered and resolved efficiently rather than arriving in conflicting rounds that pull the design in different directions without a clear decision framework.
You receive a complete design package: all screens in Figma for both iOS and Android, an interactive prototype covering primary user flows, a component library, design tokens, and developer handover documentation covering spacing, typography, color, and interaction specifications. For Pearland businesses moving directly into development after the design phase — whether with Toimi or another team — the handover package is structured so any qualified mobile developer can build from it without interpretation gaps or additional design clarification sessions before coding begins, keeping the path from approved design to submitted app as efficient as possible.