Morgan Stanley's Equity ResearchLink service competes with several other well-known firms to push equity research documents to their institutional investor client base. The website allows their clients to customize the criteria on which they receive information. The firm had already spent a huge amount of money (both outsourcing and internally) in trying to make the experience of their site more competitive when they hired me in December of 2001 to bring some closure to the process.
Morgan Stanley competes with several other well-known firms in providing research to their institutional client base. The customer's primary experience of the service is through the many electronic alerts they receive every day. The customer is already inundated with research that is pushed out to them by competing firms. The flood of redundant and irrelevant material is often experienced as "information overload". The competitive challenges were:

Redesign of Flagship Product

Although Equity ResearchLink serves as a passive searchable "library" of research data, its primary purpose is to encourage Morgan Stanley's clients to subscribe to custom search criteria on which they receive emailed content that reflects their interests. My primary mandate was to enhance the interface of this mission critical application.
The company also asked me to bring interaction design expertise to several other areas that needed help:
Enterprise-wide Standards: Corporate Portal
As the interaction design representative for Morgan's flagship Equity Research application, I worked with the "OneLook" corporate portal interface team to strategize solutions to address global contextual design issues (banners, navigation hierarchies, breadcrumbs, display footprint, browser compliance). I also advocated and educated the members of on the value of XML tools in facilitating integration across the enterprise.
E-Mail "Push"
Our clients were deluged with a barrage of equity research intelligence from us and our competitors. One of our mandates was to differentiate our service and make our email alerts of equity research intelligence competitive. The emails had to be concise, intelligible, targeted to our clients needs and easy to leverage. Our solutions included relevant cross-referencing, accelerated links and lean design.
Online Help
Equity ResearchLink lacked any useable guidance tools. At the request of the Marketing group I proposed and prototyped an integrated set of appropriate "customer assistence" solutions:
- an introductory overview slideshow
- context-sensitive targeted "how-to" wizards
- mouseover popups
- glossary reference popups
- a cross-referenced sitemap
- a standard graphically illustrated help index
Data Modeling Tool for Analysts
I supplied interaction design services to a production team out of the UK who were prototyping a tool that would allow internal Morgan Stanley analysts to perform scenarios and modeling on industry data.
The initial mandate was to redesign the page interface and navigation structure of the data modeling tool itself. I was able to correct the numerous design flaws in this complex data manipulation environment.
Once they were satisfied
with the new interface design, the coding
team approached me about how we might implement
XML tagging structures
in the subsequent rollout of their product.
They were pleased that I was able to provide
them with a seamless page development path.
Before
The legacy design was a mish-mosh
of distracting colors, layout that sprawled
across several screens, inconsistent
behavior, redundancies,
dead-ends and omissions.
The workflow was confused
and the display of complex data was smeared across
several "screenfuls"
of data.

After
I replaced the poor legacy design with a consistent
set of lean, incremental pages that made it possible
to grasp the data and the workflow "at a
glance"
Development Infrastructure
A big part of my role was to educate, advocate, inform and establish manageable processes for implementing interface redesign on a "live" product. I produced working prototypes, documented change, established stylesheets, maintained clipart/template files, standardized behaviors and libraried metadata tagging systems. I became the gatekeeper for design "best practices".
XML/XSL Transitions
I had several in-depth meetings with the manager of the document publishing side of the equity Research group. We resolved how to implement XML/XSL solutions for the maintenance/transformation/distribution of research materials in appropriate formats. The manager was pleased (and surprised) that - as a "front end design guy" - I not only understood the business case and conceptual issues but could be proactive in proposing appropriate solutions.
Morgan Stanley's internal organization and unique approach to process control offered numerous opportunities to excel in a challenging environment.