S.i. Systems enterprise public health client is seeking a REMOTE Senior UI / UX Designer (Healthcare and Salesforce certs preferred) to design UX for ImmsBC
Long term contract in 6 month contract increments
REMOTE - but must be willing to work PT time zones
S.i. Systems can present 1 candidate. Your application will only be considered if you have Salesforce experience / certs and / or public healthcare experience.
MUST HAVE SKILLS
- Senior level UI / UX design experience
- Salesforce experience / Salesforce product certifications AND / OR healthcare experience
PROJECT BACKGROUND AND JOB RESPONSIBILITIES :
ImmsBC is the provincial vaccine management digital program supporting B.C.’s Immunization Plan. ImmsBC is an extensible solution that provides a complete end-to-end experience for all people of B.
C., including online and phone registration, appointment booking, supply management, mass imms clinic workflow, clinical record of vaccine administration, and eligibility rules based on provincial vaccine program policies.
As of June 20, , ImmBC successfully registered 3.5M individuals online and by phone and scheduled 3.8M individuals for their first or second dose COVID-19 vaccine.
The UI UX Designer will work with the UI / UX lead and PHSA Platform Product Teams to design products with excellent user experience.
They are responsible for understanding what users want and then designing it so they can find all its features easily without any hassle.
Responsibilities include :
- Facilitate user design working groups
- Communicate with clients to understand their business goals and objectives
- Plan and implement new designs for platform solutions
- Create user personas and prototype diagrams
- Develop sitemaps
- Optimize existing user interface designs
- Test for intuitivity and experience
- Develop technical and business requirements and always strive to deliver intuitive and
user-centered solutions
- Combine creativity with an awareness of the design elements
- Test new ideas before implementing
- Conduct an ongoing user research