Portfolio × monday dev Hybrid Portfolio for Business & Engineering

OVERVIEW

Portfolio × monday dev was a strategic cross-product project I led to connect engineering work with business planning at scale. It was the first-ever multi-product collaboration at monday.com, bringing Agile and Waterfall projects from monday dev into Work Management portfolios as one unified view. By surfacing development epics inside business portfolios, the experience created a single source of truth for leaders to track engineering progress against go-to-market plans and strategic goals. I led the end-to-end design process across teams, balancing complex permissions, ownership, and technical constraints with a clear and scalable user experience.

A laptop with a h32 word on it.

The Vision

Leaders across Enterprise accounts were forced to “guess” how engineering work mapped to business initiatives. Portfolio and dev lived in separate worlds:

  • Business stakeholders tracked initiatives, timelines, and owners in Work Management

  • Engineering teams worked in dev boards with their own hierarchy and Agile structures

  • There was no easy way to see both sides side-by-side, or to understand progress at a glance

The vision for Portfolio × monday dev was to eliminate that guesswork:

Put business projects and dev epics in the same place, and give leaders a clear “battery status” of progress across the entire organization.

The Collaboration

Because this was the first multi-product collaboration of its kind, the work required:

  • Aligning cross-product design teams around a shared mental model of “hybrid portfolio”

  • Navigating complex tech constraints between the Portfolio product and monday dev’s Agile structures

  • Creating a flow and UI that felt natural to both business users and engineering teams

I drove this collaboration by:

  • Running highly organized workflows with developers and designers from multiple groups

  • Writing detailed meeting summaries, decisions, and open questions to keep everyone aligned

  • Initiating a user interview workshop to sharpen research insights and ground decisions in real Enterprise use cases

Key Design Decisions

Cross-product system thinking
I designed an Agile project experience that connects monday dev with Work Management, making two products feel like one connected system.

One view for two personas
The flow supports both technical users and business stakeholders, showing each persona the right level of detail without overloading the UI.

Reusable cross-product patterns
I created patterns for seats, permissions, ownership, and terminology that made the flow feel predictable and safe, and were later reused by other teams.

Role-based information architecture
I grouped information by user need: setup and structure for dev teams, and status, ownership, and risk for portfolio managers.

Scalable design impact
Several patterns from this work were reused across products, with parts of the experience registered as design patents.

The Solution

In the alpha and beta, I intentionally designed the feature to support epics from a single board. That constraint helped de-risk the first iteration, fit early technical limitations, and validate the core “hybrid portfolio” concept with users.

Based on what I learned from moderated and unmoderated user interviews with Enterprise customers, and in ongoing collaboration with engineering around technical capabilities, I then evolved the design into a more robust system that can:

Handle multiple epic boards per project.
Support templates of complex, cross-team portfolios.


Image of multiple pixelated flat icons
The word "H23" pixelated

Portfolio × monday dev Hybrid Portfolio for Business & Engineering

OVERVIEW

Portfolio × monday dev was a strategic cross-product project I led to connect engineering work with business planning at scale. It was the first-ever multi-product collaboration at monday.com, bringing Agile and Waterfall projects from monday dev into Work Management portfolios as one unified view. By surfacing development epics inside business portfolios, the experience created a single source of truth for leaders to track engineering progress against go-to-market plans and strategic goals. I led the end-to-end design process across teams, balancing complex permissions, ownership, and technical constraints with a clear and scalable user experience.

A laptop with a h32 word on it.

The Vision

Leaders across Enterprise accounts were forced to “guess” how engineering work mapped to business initiatives. Portfolio and dev lived in separate worlds:

  • Business stakeholders tracked initiatives, timelines, and owners in Work Management

  • Engineering teams worked in dev boards with their own hierarchy and Agile structures

  • There was no easy way to see both sides side-by-side, or to understand progress at a glance

The vision for Portfolio × monday dev was to eliminate that guesswork:

Put business projects and dev epics in the same place, and give leaders a clear “battery status” of progress across the entire organization.

The Collaboration

Because this was the first multi-product collaboration of its kind, the work required:

  • Aligning cross-product design teams around a shared mental model of “hybrid portfolio”

  • Navigating complex tech constraints between the Portfolio product and monday dev’s Agile structures

  • Creating a flow and UI that felt natural to both business users and engineering teams

I drove this collaboration by:

  • Running highly organized workflows with developers and designers from multiple groups

  • Writing detailed meeting summaries, decisions, and open questions to keep everyone aligned

  • Initiating a user interview workshop to sharpen research insights and ground decisions in real Enterprise use cases

Key Design Decisions

Cross-product system thinking
I designed an Agile project experience that connects monday dev with Work Management, making two products feel like one connected system.

One view for two personas
The flow supports both technical users and business stakeholders, showing each persona the right level of detail without overloading the UI.

Reusable cross-product patterns
I created patterns for seats, permissions, ownership, and terminology that made the flow feel predictable and safe, and were later reused by other teams.

Role-based information architecture
I grouped information by user need: setup and structure for dev teams, and status, ownership, and risk for portfolio managers.

Scalable design impact
Several patterns from this work were reused across products, with parts of the experience registered as design patents.

The Solution

In the alpha and beta, I intentionally designed the feature to support epics from a single board. That constraint helped de-risk the first iteration, fit early technical limitations, and validate the core “hybrid portfolio” concept with users.

Based on what I learned from moderated and unmoderated user interviews with Enterprise customers, and in ongoing collaboration with engineering around technical capabilities, I then evolved the design into a more robust system that can:

Handle multiple epic boards per project.
Support templates of complex, cross-team portfolios.


Image of multiple pixelated flat icons
The word "H23" pixelated

Portfolio × monday dev Hybrid Portfolio for Business & Engineering

OVERVIEW

Portfolio × monday dev was a strategic cross-product project I led to connect engineering work with business planning at scale. It was the first-ever multi-product collaboration at monday.com, bringing Agile and Waterfall projects from monday dev into Work Management portfolios as one unified view. By surfacing development epics inside business portfolios, the experience created a single source of truth for leaders to track engineering progress against go-to-market plans and strategic goals. I led the end-to-end design process across teams, balancing complex permissions, ownership, and technical constraints with a clear and scalable user experience.

A laptop with a h32 word on it.

The Vision

Leaders across Enterprise accounts were forced to “guess” how engineering work mapped to business initiatives. Portfolio and dev lived in separate worlds:

  • Business stakeholders tracked initiatives, timelines, and owners in Work Management

  • Engineering teams worked in dev boards with their own hierarchy and Agile structures

  • There was no easy way to see both sides side-by-side, or to understand progress at a glance

The vision for Portfolio × monday dev was to eliminate that guesswork:

Put business projects and dev epics in the same place, and give leaders a clear “battery status” of progress across the entire organization.

The Collaboration

Because this was the first multi-product collaboration of its kind, the work required:

  • Aligning cross-product design teams around a shared mental model of “hybrid portfolio”

  • Navigating complex tech constraints between the Portfolio product and monday dev’s Agile structures

  • Creating a flow and UI that felt natural to both business users and engineering teams

I drove this collaboration by:

  • Running highly organized workflows with developers and designers from multiple groups

  • Writing detailed meeting summaries, decisions, and open questions to keep everyone aligned

  • Initiating a user interview workshop to sharpen research insights and ground decisions in real Enterprise use cases

Key Design Decisions

Cross-product system thinking
I designed an Agile project experience that connects monday dev with Work Management, making two products feel like one connected system.

One view for two personas
The flow supports both technical users and business stakeholders, showing each persona the right level of detail without overloading the UI.

Reusable cross-product patterns
I created patterns for seats, permissions, ownership, and terminology that made the flow feel predictable and safe, and were later reused by other teams.

Role-based information architecture
I grouped information by user need: setup and structure for dev teams, and status, ownership, and risk for portfolio managers.

Scalable design impact
Several patterns from this work were reused across products, with parts of the experience registered as design patents.

The Solution

In the alpha and beta, I intentionally designed the feature to support epics from a single board. That constraint helped de-risk the first iteration, fit early technical limitations, and validate the core “hybrid portfolio” concept with users.

Based on what I learned from moderated and unmoderated user interviews with Enterprise customers, and in ongoing collaboration with engineering around technical capabilities, I then evolved the design into a more robust system that can:

Handle multiple epic boards per project.
Support templates of complex, cross-team portfolios.


Image of multiple pixelated flat icons
The word "H23" pixelated

Interested to work with me?
edenzelivansky@gmail.com

2:37:34 PM

Interested to work with me?
edenzelivansky@gmail.com

2:37:34 PM

Interested to work with me?
edenzelivansky@gmail.com

2:37:34 PM