SOP: Converting UX Flow into Wireframe Drafts

1. Purpose

To provide a repeatable process for translating validated UX flows into structured wireframe drafts that are layout-ready, responsive-aware, and developer-aligned.


2. Scope

  • Applies to all new screens, features, and redesigns.
  • Used by designers and design leads before moving to high-fidelity UI.

3. Definitions

  • Wireframe Draft → A low/medium fidelity layout focusing on structure, not visuals.
  • Wireflow → Wireframe + UX flow combined to show interactions.
  • State Variants → Empty, Loading, Success, Error versions of a wireframe.

4. Step-by-Step Process

Stage A – Preparation

  1. Review Inputs
    • Approved UX Flow Diagram (EPIC 2.4).
    • Interaction-State Coverage Model (EPIC 2.6).
    • Navigation Depth Model (EPIC 2.7).
  2. Define Screen Scope
    • Which screens, states, and variants need wireframes.
    • Assign IDs consistent with flows (e.g., WF1, WF2).

Stage B – Drafting Wireframes

  1. Layout Structure
    • Apply Wireframe Structuring Model (Doc 3.2).
    • Break into modular zones: Hero, CTA, Info Blocks, Actions.
    • Define spacing using Grid & Spacing Rulesheet (Doc 3.5).
  2. Content Mapping
    • Place placeholder text/images (no lorem ipsum).
    • Ensure alignment with Design Goals & Success Criteria (EPIC 1.7).
  3. State Variants
    • Create at least: Empty, Loading, Success, Error.
    • For data-driven screens, add Permission/Edge cases.
  4. Annotations
    • Add notes for interactions, data sources, and transitions.
    • Use consistent annotation style (side notes, sticky labels).

Stage C – Validation & Review

  1. Internal Review
    • Run through Wireframe Review Checklist (Doc 3.6).
    • Cross-check with UX goals and flows.
  2. Peer Feedback
    • Use Peer Wireframe Feedback Sheet (Doc 3.9).
    • Incorporate suggestions, fix gaps.
  3. Lead Sign-Off
    • Final review by Design Lead.
    • Store approved drafts in Figma folder: Project > Wireframes > Approved.

Stage D – Transition to UI

  1. Handoff Prep
    • Organize frames by ID/order.
    • Merge into Wireflow Mapping Sheet (Doc 3.4) for flow + layout view.
  2. Approval & Lock
    • Apply Wireframe Approval SOP (Doc 3.10).
    • Mark files as “Locked for UI.”

5. Roles & Responsibilities

  • Designer Assigned → Creates wireframe drafts, annotations, states.
  • Peer Designer → Reviews logical/structural quality.
  • Design Lead → Approves final drafts, ensures business/user alignment.
  • PM (Optional) → Validates against business goals.

6. Governance

  • Wireframes cannot move to UI stage without approval.
  • Missing state variants or incomplete annotations = automatic revision.
  • Consistency in spacing and layout rules is mandatory.

Outcome: UX flows become concrete wireframe drafts with structure, states, and annotations — ready to transition smoothly into UI design.