Takami – Bootstrapping to Traction
Role
Product Strategist, Brand & UI Designer
Industry
Food & Beverage / Wellness / DTC (Direct-to-Consumer)
Business Model
Community-led B2C with future digital product monetization (Freemium / Content-Driven SaaS)
Executive Summary
For Takami, a traditional tea house, I created a lightweight, community-first product vision to validate their bold idea: that a centuries-old ritual could resonate with a modern, digital-native audience.
With no dev team and a tight budget, I led a lean, design-led approach that combined storytelling, branding, and audience testing.
This resulted in a growing waitlist, feature-level feedback, and the traction Takami needed to move forward and secure strategic interest.
From Tradition to Traction
Takami didn’t come to me with a backlog, but rather with a question: Can we translate the cultural richness of tea ceremonies into a digital experience without losing its soul?
They had no developers, no product roadmap, and no clue if people would even want a tea app.
What they did have was vision, and the willingness to test it the smart way. In this case, my role wasn’t to design a product, it was to guide the strategy that would prove whether it deserved to be designed and built.
A Sprint That Made the Vision Tangible
We kicked off on a one-week sprint to validate the idea as cheap and fast as possible. I facilitated workshops with the stakeholders, where we clarified Takami’s digital value proposition and crafted a visual identity aimed at a younger, culture-curious audience.
I then designed a few key mockup screens (really just enough to make the vision feel tangible), we launched a landing page that positioned the app as a curated, sensory tea journey, and offered early access. Then, we launched a organic and paid campaign to prompt signups.
That page served its purpose: it drew in signups and kicked off conversations. As we only had operated on assumptions so far, it gave us now a way to let potential users vote on the features they wanted most: virtual tea club, tastings, seasonal pairings, cultural stories.
The feedback helped shape a clear direction and Takami didn’t just get a rebrand, but also validation, a roadmap grounded in demand, and a growing community ready to engage.
All without building a product (yet).
Design for Validation
Design can not only help you craft a product, but also reduce risk and create leverage. Instead of guessing, we got creative and designed a low-cost low-risk experiment and tested the idea.
This project reinforced a core belief I hold: sometimes the smartest thing to design isn’t a product, but a test. And if that test performs strong enough, it can become the foundation of something much bigger.