



Tracking supplements made simple: routines, reminders, results.
Many Cymbiotika users shared the same struggle: they wanted to take their supplements consistently, but it was just too easy to forget. The irony? Consistency is the most important part of a supplement routine. These frustrations surfaced over and over in user interviews, along with a recurring request: "I just want something simple that helps me stay on track."
In response, I led the design of a Supplement Tracker feature that helps users build daily routines, stay consistent through contextual push notifications, and log their progress in a way that feels lightweight and motivating. I worked closely with product, engineering, and CX to define the MVP, prioritize the right behaviors to support, and design a flow that could scale into deeper personalization over time.
ROLE
Product Designer
TEAM
Christine Park
Angelique Allison
Raphael Muli
SKILLS
Feature Prioritzation
Wireframing
Prototyping
PLATFORM
Mobile app
DESIGN DECISION 1
Prioritizing the MVP to support core habits
We cut ideas like widgets and AI to stay focused on the core habit loop: schedule, reminder, log. This will let us launch faster and validate behavior first.
DESIGN DECISION 2
Creating and managing your routine is simple
We provide helpful tips that make it easier to digest information heavy supplement products.






DESIGN DECISION 3
Making daily logging effortless and motivating
Logs are grouped by time, with the ability to log everything all at once.
Reinforcement copy helps build habit, not guilt.
DESIGN DECISION 4
Designing push notifications that reinforce routine
Grouped reminders listed upcoming supplements and deep-linked into the app for quick logging. We explored logging from the notification but opted for in-app control to avoid mistakes.


The Supplement Tracker is still a work in progress, but early feedback from internal teams has been overwhelmingly positive. This project pushed me to think deeply about behavior design, habit formation, and the balance between simplicity and utility. I’m excited to see how the feature performs once it launches and how it can evolve into something even more personalized and impactful for our users.