Interaction Design and Creative Direction
Breaking through information overload

Google News Desktop

Transforming a dated aggregator into a comprehensive and structured news experience for millions of users across 120+ global content editions.

Breaking through information overload

Breaking through information overload

The legacy Google News desktop struggled with a cluttered interface and unclear personalization. Users needed a digestible way to stay informed without feeling overwhelmed.

We aimed to transform Google News from an endless stream of headlines to a user's go-to dashboard to get up to speed quickly with the breadth and customization expected of the world's leading news aggregator.

Bringing the briefing to desktop

Bringing the briefing to desktop

The core of the redesign adapts the mobile app's successful "briefing" concept to large screens. The layout provides three distinct sections: Top Stories for major national and international headlines, Local News for community coverage, and a personalized feed based on individual interests.

The structure transforms the homepage from a dense list of links into a scannable, at-a-glance dashboard, and increased prominence of local news makes it easier for users to discover and follow stories from their specific area.

Empowering topic personalization

Empowering topic personalization

Research showed that desktop users desired more organization and the ability to fine-tune their news experience and the ability to personalize the content they see. Through eye-tracking studies and A/B testing, we learned users' preference for clear labeling and scannable sections over a randomized list, feed or visual grid of articles.

We worked closely with engineers to tune both the content and quality across dozens of topics, and built new customization tools that give users more control and drive greater engagement than ranked topics alone.

Designing for desktop user needs and behaviors

Designing for desktop user needs and behaviors

Desktop users approach news differently than mobile—they multitask across tabs, expect deeper story context, and want granular control over what they see. 

These behaviors drove our core design principles: we prioritized clarity over density, gave users control over algorithmic suggestions, and optimized for easy scannability through visual structure.

A flexible system for multiple feed types

A flexible system for multiple feed types

We designed a unified component system that adapts across personalized, topic, and local feeds, each serving different needs but sharing visual consistency. This simplified development while creating coherence as users navigate between pages.

Linked section headers increased cross-feed traffic, connecting once-isolated pages. Local news customization allows users to follow multiple locations and topic pages providing greater editorial depth.

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