Capstone · UX Research & Design · Dell Technologies · Spring 2026
Making Sense of a Hardware Service System I'd Never Seen
A one-semester capstone with Dell's ISG team. I stepped into an unfamiliar world of enterprise server hardware and field service, and through research redefined what the on-product label needed to be — from a static structural map to an in-situ service support layer — then proposed a structured, multi-layer redesign.
🚀 Presented to Dell ISG label-design leadership and a cross-department roundtable. The direction is now moving toward a planned redesign.
Context
Dell's ISG servers carry System Information Labels (SILs) — the printed diagrams on the chassis that field engineers rely on to service the hardware. The visual system behind them is 10+ years old, built for an era when the label was the primary reference. I was brought in with a deceptively simple brief: modernize the label.
I had never worked in enterprise hardware, never been on a field-service call, never set foot in a data center. With one semester and a domain whose language I didn't speak, the first job wasn't to design — it was to understand, fast.
In a service workflow I'd never seen, what does the label actually need to do?
The current label: dense, lid-mounted, and built to be read away from the machine.
Research
Building a working model of an unfamiliar domain
I had about eight weeks before synthesis. I spent them triangulating three sources: working sessions with Dell's label-design lead and an industrial designer, two rounds of competitive analysis, and semi-structured interviews with two field engineers — each paired with a live concept-validation segment, where I tested early directions on the spot (arrows vs. hands, distributed vs. centralized labels, color mapping).
The two engineers I interviewed used the system in almost opposite ways. That contrast became the backbone of my synthesis.
I also studied how others solve the same problem — and looked outside the industry, at instruction systems like IKEA and LEGO, for how high complexity can stay legible.
The reframe
When the label was never the tool
Across both interviews, one conclusion held: the SIL is not the primary workflow tool. Modern service runs on software diagnostics and digital documentation; the physical label is a situational support layer engineers reach for in the moment — at the rack, hands already in the machine. Designing it as a denser, prettier "complete map" would optimize the wrong thing.
So I redefined the goal. The label shouldn't try to be the manual — it should be in-situ, distributed, and contextual: support, not reference. I structured my response across three layers.
From structural map to service support layer.
I was asked to modernize a label. The research said the label was never the real tool — so the more useful move was to redefine what it should be. That reframe, and the three-layer structure under it, was the call I drove.
Design directions
Four moves, each tied to a research insight
From the three layers, I proposed four concrete directions — a system of moves, not a single idea.
Concept
In-situ physical guidance
The boldest expression of the reframe: a semi-transparent overlay that lays directly over the open server and aligns with the real components beneath it. Instead of interpreting a diagram and counting slots, an engineer reads guidance in place — the right DIMM, the install order, the hot- vs. cold-swap touchpoints — while still seeing the hardware through it.
This is a concept, not a production spec. A film laid over live boards raises real questions — static discharge, durability, whether engineers would carry it. I'd want to prototype and validate those before going further. Naming the open questions felt more honest than pretending they're solved.
Visual craft
Carrying the system down to the label itself
The same principles, applied to the labels engineers use today. I reworked two high-frequency operations — fan removal and BBU removal — through a progression: original → step-based → integrated single-view.
The space is tiny, so the goal was never more information — it was bigger, clearer information. The integrated single-view merges what were four cramped step panels into one enlarged diagram. That move drew the strongest response from Dell's team.
BBU removal — original → step-based → integrated single-view.
Fan removal — the same progression, applied to a second high-frequency task.
Outcome
I presented the work twice — first to the label-design leadership, then in a roundtable to a wider set of the department. The reception was positive, and the direction is feeding a redesign the team is now moving forward.
Two directions drew the strongest response: the integrated single-view ("all-in-one") approach, and the strengthened visual focus that lifts active components out of the chassis.
"I'd use it more if it were easier to get to."— Field engineer, on access friction
"The help should be where my hands already are."— Field engineer, on location
"Arrows are clearer than hands for the motion."— Field engineer, on visual cues
iSchool capstone poster session, April 2026.
Reflection
I walked into a domain I knew nothing about — enterprise hardware, field service, a data center I'd never seen — and the real work was less about drawing labels than about building a model of an unfamiliar system fast enough to make a structured call. That's the part I'm proudest of.
The label was the brief. The workflow was the problem. Seeing that, and deciding to design for it, was the work.
This work is the opening move in what would be a long redesign arc. In physical products, change cycles run six months or longer — every label revision means tooling and print costs. The realistic path forward: pitch the direction internally to build small buy-in, mock it at higher fidelity, run internal user research against key metrics (task time, error rate, satisfaction), and weigh the gains against the cost of change. I understand my role was to bring a fresh lens and structured thinking to the early stage — the further this goes, the more it becomes an engineering and business conversation.
Throughout, I used AI tools to move faster — drafting concept visuals and helping organize interview notes — so more of a short timeline went to sense-making than to production.