Carah is a care coordination app designed to make daily care tasks, live progress tracking, and shift handovers simpler for care homes, caregivers, and families.
The idea came from a clear problem: care often depends on scattered notes, verbal updates, WhatsApp messages, paper checklists, and memory. That creates confusion, missed context, repeated questions, and stressful shift changes. Carah turns daily care into a simple shared system: create a care card once, assign tasks, track progress live, confirm care actions, and hand over clearly to the next person.
I didn’t want to build another clinical dashboard. I wanted Carah to feel warm, human, calm, and trustworthy. The experience is designed for real care environments where people need clarity quickly, without feeling overwhelmed by software.
The product includes onboarding, role selection, care profile setup, daily care card creation, task timing, caregiver invitations, live task progress, check-off notifications, chat, shift handover notes, review-style confirmation, family access, and settings.
What made Carah interesting as a product challenge was the emotional weight of the problem. This is not just productivity software. It is about trust, continuity, dignity, and making sure care does not break between people, shifts, or family members.
Why I Built Carah
I wanted to solve a real operational problem in care: the gap between what needs to be done, what has been done, and what the next person needs to know.
In many care settings, the hardest part is not only doing the work. It is keeping everyone aligned. Carah helps reduce that friction by giving caregivers and managers one clear place to see daily tasks, progress, notes, and handovers.
The goal was to make care coordination feel less fragmented and more reliable.
How I Used ChatGPT
I used ChatGPT as a research, strategy, and planning partner throughout the project.
ChatGPT helped me shape the problem, define the core user roles, structure the product flow, simplify the feature set, refine the care card logic, explore the owner and caregiver experience, and turn the idea into a clear product narrative.
It also helped me sharpen the positioning: Carah is not a medical record system or a complex care management platform. It is a simple daily care coordination tool focused on tasks, handovers, visibility, and trust.
Workflow and Product Development
Step 1: Problem Definition
I started by identifying the core problem:
Daily care is often split across people, shifts, notes, and memory.
This creates practical risks:
missed tasks
unclear handovers
repeated instructions
poor visibility for managers
confusion between caregivers
limited reassurance for families
Carah was built around one simple goal: make daily care easier to see, complete, and hand over.
Step 2: User Roles and Flow
I designed the product around two main roles:
Owner / Manager
Caregiver / Staff
The core flow became:
Sign up → Choose role → Create profile → Add care profile → Build daily care card → Invite caregivers → Track tasks → Complete care actions → Send handover → Next caregiver continues
This helped keep the product focused on the real daily rhythm of care homes.
Step 3: Care Card System
The care card became the heart of the product.
Instead of creating scattered tasks every day, the owner can build a care card once and reuse it as a daily structure.
Each care card includes:
care recipient details
daily tasks
task timing
assigned caregiver
progress status
notes
completion state
handover history
This makes the app feel useful immediately because the caregiver always knows what needs to happen next.
Step 4: Live Progress and Check-Offs
I added live progress logic so managers and caregivers can see what has been completed and what is still pending.
For example:
12 of 20 tasks completed
8 tasks remaining
next task due soon
handover ready
This gives Carah a real operational layer. It is not just a static prototype. The interface shows care moving forward through the day.
Step 5: Shift Handover
The handover flow was one of the most important parts of the product.
Caregivers can add notes before ending a shift, confirm completed tasks, and send a handover to the next caregiver.
The next caregiver can then open the care card and continue with context instead of starting from zero.
This feature is what makes Carah feel truly useful in a care setting.
Step 6: Family Adaptation
I also explored how the same logic could work for families caring for a loved one at home.
In the family version, the language changes:
caregiver becomes family member
unit becomes house
care profile becomes family care card
team becomes family
This makes Carah flexible enough for both professional care homes and family care situations.
Step 7: Visual Direction
The visual direction was designed to feel premium, warm, and trustworthy.
The design system used:
warm brown as the primary colour
deep green for trust and calm
soft blue accents
clean neutral backgrounds
rounded cards
clear hierarchy
gentle glassmorphism
soft biomorphic shapes
simple icons
high-contrast readable text
The goal was to avoid the cold, clinical feeling common in care software. Carah needed to feel calm, human, and easy to use.
Step 8: Prototype Experience
The prototype was designed to feel like a real product journey, not just a set of disconnected screens.
The key experience includes:
login and signup
role selection
profile setup
care card creation
task timing
caregiver invite
dashboard
live care card
notifications
chat
handover notes
family access
settings
Each screen was connected to show how a real caregiver, manager, or family member would move through the product.
Final Thoughts
Carah is built around a simple but important belief:
Care should not depend on memory, scattered notes, or broken handovers.
The product turns daily care into a shared, visible, and calm system. It helps caregivers know what to do, helps managers see progress, and helps families feel reassured.
For me, the strongest part of Carah is that it solves a real human problem through a simple product experience. It is not trying to be everything. It focuses on one painful workflow and makes it clearer.
Project Name: Carah
Live Links
Mobile app prototype:
https://aloha-pasta-27048890.figma.site/
Community Link:
https://www.figma.com/community/file/164835761...