Files View
Tags View
Disclosures Data View
Review Details View

Case Study

FloQast Reporting

Designed a 0-to-1 XBRL tagging product that transformed a 150-hour manual filing process into a streamlined workflow — securing a $300K deal with Ralph Lauren.

Role Senior Product Designer
Team 1 Designer, 1 PM, 6 Engineers
Type 0 → 1 Product
Scope Research, Design, Prototype, Testing

Every public company must file financial reports with the SEC using XBRL — a structured data standard that makes financial information machine-readable. The existing process was fragmented across multiple tools, entirely manual, and took weeks of coordination.

I led the end-to-end design of FloQast's XBRL tagging product from concept through production launch — conducting research, running design sprints, and ultimately discovering a novel approach that made the entire MVP viable.

95%
Task Completion
~150h
Saved Per Filing
$300K
Deal Secured
3,000+
Tags Per Filing

01 — Context

What is XBRL?

Understanding the global standard that drives financial reporting.

XBRL (eXtensible Business Reporting Language) is an open international standard for digital business reporting, used around the world for the exchange of financial information. It’s mandated by the SEC for all public company filings since 2009 and adopted by regulators in over 50 countries.

XBRL transforms financial reporting from static documents into structured, machine-readable data — enabling faster, more accurate analysis across companies, industries, and borders.

gavel

Regulatory Compliance

Required by the SEC, ESMA, and regulators globally. Non-compliance can mean filing rejections and penalties.

query_stats

Data Comparability

Standardized tags make it possible to compare financials across companies, industries, and borders instantly.

speed

Efficiency Gains

Eliminates manual re-keying of data. Analysts and auditors can consume structured data directly from filings.


02 — Problem

A Broken Process

Manual workflows, fragmented tools, and weeks of coordination.

Before any XBRL tagging can begin, financial data must be collected from every team across the organization — each maintaining their own Excel workbooks, formats, and timelines. A typical 10-K consolidation cycle takes six weeks of coordination and firefighting.

Tools like Workiva require accountants to manually tag every field in a disclosure — mapping each value to an XBRL concept one at a time, using a patchwork of software.

edit_note

Manual Tagging

Every value in a filing must be individually mapped to an XBRL taxonomy concept — thousands of tags per document.

sync_problem

Tags Change Every Year

Taxonomy updates mean prior-year mappings break. Teams start from scratch each filing cycle.

devices

Software Cocktail

Accountants juggle Excel, Word, a tagging tool, and a validation tool just to complete a single disclosure.

timer

~150 Hours Per Filing

At roughly 3 minutes per tag and 3,000+ tags per filing, manual tagging consumes weeks of a single person’s time.


03 — Research

Building the Product

From identifying the opportunity to shipping a production-ready product.

We identified a $2B+ compliance market with no native tagging solution in existing close platforms. From there, I led a focused design sprint with product, engineering, and domain experts to map user journeys and converge on a core solution.

1
Market Opportunity Analyzed the regulatory landscape, competitive gaps, and customer demand for inline XBRL tagging within the close management workflow.
TAM/SAM Analysis Competitive Audit Customer Interviews
2
Research & Design Sprint Ran a focused design sprint with product, engineering, and domain experts. Mapped user journeys for accountants and filing preparers, prioritized features by impact vs. effort.
User Research Journey Mapping Impact–Effort Prioritization
3
Prototype Built interactive prototypes demonstrating the tagging interface, taxonomy browser, and validation dashboard. Tested end-to-end workflows with accounting teams.
Figma Prototype Usability Testing EDGAR Validation
4
Final Delivery Shipped the production XBRL tagging module integrated into FloQast’s close management platform — reducing filing prep time by 60%.
Production Launch Platform Integration 60% Time Savings

04 — Solutions

Jobs to Be Done

We mapped the core jobs accountants need to accomplish during the filing process — and designed solutions that directly address each one.

smart_toy

Automate XBRL Tagging

Auto-suggest tags based on prior filings, line-item labels, and taxonomy patterns — reducing manual lookups by 80%.

visibility

Review Cycle Visibility

A unified dashboard showing tag status, reviewer comments, change history, and approval state across every review cycle.

integration_instructions

One Platform, Not Five

Consolidate data import, tagging, validation, and submission into a single integrated platform within FloQast.

verified

Real-Time Validation

Inline validation checks that surface errors as you tag — not after you’ve completed the entire document.


05 — The Pivot

Scoping to an MVP

Limited engineering capacity meant hard cuts and a true minimum viable product.

The team had bandwidth for one focused build cycle. AI-powered features required ML infrastructure, training data pipelines, and model tuning that couldn’t be delivered in the timeline. We had to strip back to what was buildable and still valuable.

  • ×AI-powered tag suggestions
  • ×Confidence scoring engine
  • ×Auto roll-forward with smart diff
  • ×Real-time co-editing
  • ×Migration wizard
  • Manual tagging with taxonomy search
  • Unified workspace (single pane)
  • Inline validation & error checking
  • Review status dashboard
  • Prior-filing tag copy (manual)
“The MVP still solved the core jobs — eliminating software hopping, providing review visibility, and making tagging faster. AI features were staged for Phase 2.”
Design Decision — Scope Management

06 — Wireframes

Initial Wireframes

Low-fidelity mockups from the first design iteration — focused on validating the core user flow before investing in visual polish.


07 — The Challenge

Manual Tagging Won’t Scale

3,000+ tags per filing made one-by-one entry unsustainable.

After pivoting to an MVP without AI automation, our system required users to manually add each XBRL tag one by one. With 3,000+ tags per filing, this approach would be unsustainably slow and defeat the purpose of the product.

3,000+
tags in a typical annual filing. Large financial institutions can exceed 10,000. At ~3 minutes per tag manually, that’s 150+ hours and 4 weeks of one person’s time.

This confirmed our pivot was right — the MVP needed to support bulk import and reuse of existing tags, not just manual one-by-one creation. Building for scale was non-negotiable.


08 — Innovation

A Better Way

Discovering that prior XBRL filings are freely accessible from SEC EDGAR.

Instead of asking users to manually create thousands of tags, I investigated the SEC EDGAR database and discovered that every public company’s previous XBRL filings — including all tags — are freely accessible and embedded directly in the HTML source.

I then worked with engineering to validate that extraction was technically feasible before presenting the idea back to the product manager, who brought it to leadership. With their buy-in, we modified the MVP requirements.

90%+
of tags are reusable year over year. By importing tags from a company’s previous SEC filing, users start with a pre-populated tag set instead of a blank slate — saving ~150 hours per filing.

09 — Design

Final Design

Six key areas shaped by research, user testing, and technical feasibility.

With the existing design system flexible enough to support the experience, I focused on six key areas for the final design: onboarding, fast tag import, tag preview, complete matching, document configuration, and export.

rocket_launch

Onboarding

Guide users through setting up their first XBRL filing — connecting data sources, selecting filing type, and understanding the workflow.

bolt

Fast Tag Import

Bulk import tags from previous SEC filings and Excel workbooks — turning a 150-hour manual process into minutes.

preview

Preview Tags

Review and validate imported tags before committing — ensuring accuracy and confidence before submission.

join

Complete Matching

Leverage FloQast’s transaction matching to automatically map tags to line items — resolving mismatches and flagging items that need attention.

tune

Configure & Review

Configure document settings, review tagged content across all sections, and resolve any discrepancies before finalizing.

upload_file

Export Disclosure

Generate and export the completed XBRL-tagged disclosure — ready for SEC submission with all tags validated.


10 — Impact

Results & Impact

We brought the updated prototype back to clients for validation testing, measured against key success metrics, and gathered direct feedback.

95%
Task completion rate on tag import flow
Usability
~150h
Saved per filing vs. manual tagging
Efficiency
$300K
Customer deal secured with new solution
Revenue
F500
Ralph Lauren as first alpha partner
Validation
Alpha Partner

Ralph Lauren

Our first Fortune 500 enterprise partner and alpha tester.

Ralph Lauren partnered with FloQast as the first alpha testers of the XBRL tagging product — signing a $300K annual deal on top of being an alpha partner, validating the solution with a Fortune 500 enterprise client.

The prototype directly contributed to closing this deal, demonstrating how design-driven thinking can translate into measurable business outcomes.

timer

Time on Task

Measured how long users took to import tags and complete filing setup compared to the manual process.

task_alt

Task Completion

Tracked whether users could successfully onboard, import, preview, and match tags without assistance.

sentiment_satisfied

Client Satisfaction

Gathered qualitative feedback on confidence, clarity, and willingness to adopt the new workflow.

trending_up

Business Impact

The prototype directly contributed to closing a $300K deal, validating the design’s value to sales and leadership.


11 — Reflections

Key Learnings

What this project taught me about 0-to-1 product design.

01

Investigate Before Building

The SEC EDGAR discovery came from personal investigation, not a product brief. Digging into the problem domain yourself — beyond what’s asked — can unlock solutions nobody expected.

02

Scope Ruthlessly

Cutting AI features was painful, but the MVP still solved the core jobs. Shipping a focused product that works is better than a broad one that doesn’t ship.

03

Design Sells

The prototype directly closed a $300K deal with Ralph Lauren. When design is polished enough to demo to executives, it becomes a revenue driver, not just a support function.

04

Cross-Functional Influence

Validated the technical approach with engineering, pitched it to PM, who sold it to leadership. Designers who can navigate the org get their ideas built.