Azibo property management platform

Case Study

Azibo

Building a modern property management platform from zero to one — rent collection, expense tracking, tenant management, and financial reporting in a single product.

Role Founding Product Designer
Timeline May 2020 – Oct 2021
Location Redwood City, CA (Hybrid)
Scope 0→1 Product, 80+ Components

Azibo is an all-in-one property management platform built for independent landlords and property managers. As the founding product designer, I built the entire product experience from scratch — design system, navigation, information architecture, and every core workflow.

Working directly with the CEO and CTO on product strategy, I helped shape the vision that contributed to a $10M Series A and grew the platform from zero to 5,000+ property managers in the first year.

$10M
Series A Raised
5,000+
Users in Year One
80+
Design System Components
1st
Founding Designer

01 — Context

The Property Management Gap

Why independent landlords needed something better.

Property managers — especially independent landlords managing 1–50 units — were stuck with a patchwork of tools. Rent collection happened through Venmo or paper checks. Expense tracking lived in spreadsheets. Tenant communication was scattered across email, text, and phone calls.

Enterprise solutions like Yardi and AppFolio existed, but they were bloated, expensive, and designed for large property management companies. Independent landlords needed a modern, all-in-one platform that handled rent collection, expense tracking, tenant management, and financial reporting without the enterprise overhead.


02 — Research

Understanding the Workflow

Mapping property manager pain points and daily routines.

We conducted interviews with dozens of property managers — from solo landlords with 3 units to small companies managing 50+. The patterns were remarkably consistent across all segments.

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Fragmented Tools

Managers juggled 4–6 separate tools for rent, accounting, maintenance, and communication. No single source of truth for their portfolio.

payments

Manual Rent Collection

Over 60% of landlords we interviewed still collected rent via paper checks or informal digital payments with no automated tracking.

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Lack of Financial Visibility

Most couldn’t answer basic questions about their portfolio’s profitability without hours of manual reconciliation in spreadsheets.

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Tenant Communication Gaps

No centralized communication history. Important conversations about leases, maintenance, and payments were scattered across channels.


03 — The Problem

No End-to-End Solution

The core challenge we needed to solve.

No single platform handled the complete property management workflow. Managers were forced to juggle spreadsheets for bookkeeping, separate banking tools for rent collection, email for tenant communication, and manual processes for everything in between.

4–6
separate tools stitched together by the average property manager — creating data silos, duplicate entry, and zero visibility into portfolio-level performance

The opportunity was clear: build a unified platform that connects rent collection, expense tracking, banking, tenant management, and reporting into a single, coherent experience. And as the founding designer, I’d be building it all from scratch.


04 — Dynamic Onboarding

From Empty Dashboard to Guided First Run

Users used to land on a page with nothing to do. We replaced it with a personalized onboarding flow.

The old dashboard dropped new users into an empty state — $0 everywhere, no guidance, no next step. Most churned before ever adding a property. We designed a dynamic onboarding flow that lets users self-select what they want to do when joining the platform, then tailors the setup experience to their selections.

The flow works across desktop and mobile, with a “skip and come back” option at every step so users never feel locked in — a pattern that proved critical for landlords who juggle setup across multiple sessions.


05 — Information Architecture

Navigation & Structure

Designing the platform’s skeleton from zero.

With a blank canvas, every structural decision mattered. I designed the navigation, site map, and user flows to balance the breadth of features (rent, expenses, banking, tenants, properties) with simplicity for first-time users.

The IA needed to work for a landlord managing 3 units and scale to someone managing 50+. We organized around the property manager’s mental model — properties as the anchor, with finances, tenants, and maintenance as connected dimensions.

1
Properties as Primary Objects Everything in the platform revolves around properties. Each property is a hub that connects tenants, leases, transactions, and maintenance requests.
2
Portfolio-Level Overview The dashboard aggregates across all properties, giving managers a single view of rent status, outstanding balances, and financial health.
3
Progressive Complexity New users see a simple, focused experience. As their portfolio grows, advanced features like reporting, banking integration, and automated reminders surface naturally.

06 — Key Screens

The Platform Experience

Core workflows across rent collection, property management, and financial reporting.


07 — Impact

Results & Impact

From zero to a funded, growing product in 1.5 years.

$10M
Series A funding raised
Fundraise
5K+
Property managers in year one
Growth
80+
Design system components shipped
Components
0→1
Full product built from scratch
Product

08 — Reflections

Key Takeaways

What I learned building a product from zero as the founding designer.

01

Building from Zero Means Owning Everything

As the founding designer, there was no existing system to lean on. Every decision — from the color palette to the navigation structure — set a precedent that would compound. The discipline of thinking in systems from day one paid off as the product scaled.

02

Working Directly with Founders

Sitting in the room with the CEO and CTO meant design had a seat at the strategy table from the start. We didn’t just execute on specs — we shaped the product vision together, which meant design decisions were grounded in business context.

03

Scaling a Design System from Scratch

Building 80+ components without a team of design system specialists meant being ruthlessly pragmatic. I focused on the components that would unlock the most features first, iterated based on real product needs, and documented just enough to keep engineering aligned.