 Good afternoon. My name is Sheryl, and I work as a UX consultant in ThoughtWorks. I started designing a website when I was 17 years old, and that experience has shaped me as a person who could design a web product for users who would love to use it. That's a bit about myself. My name is Krishna, but I generally go with an MKK. So it's one KK replacing the other on the stage right now. So my journey into IT started 11 years ago. Nine years ago, I joined a startup. And we were very agile, even though we didn't know what agile really was back then. And that's how my journey into agile started. For the past six years, I've been working with ThoughtWorks in multiple roles, primarily, I joined as a QA. But I also worked as a consultant coach, business analyst, and on the list, the latest project I'm working as a project manager with Sheryl I have a deep connection with UX because I'd like to use products that have really good user experience. So that's a button. And outside of work, I like to bike. That's a picture of a bike. Cool. So what are we going to talk about today? We're sharing our experience on how we achieved building incremental UX user experience in one of the agile projects that we're working on. So traditionally, if you see UX, it wasn't given that much importance or value. So the user experience, our designers would always be siloed. That has changed radically in the last few years. However, if you think about the agile practices itself, they do address most of the core development issues, or testing issues, or analysis issues. But even now, if you see, they seldom address the user experience. So how do you really think about building user experience in an incremental fashion in an agile project? And we have faced some problems in the earlier projects, which we failed to address. But then when we just started this project, we thought, OK, there are some lessons to learn for us. And we should make the most out of it. There's some challenges that we faced. And we wanted to basically tackle those up front. So that was the prime motive. And that was the prime goal when we actually started working on this project. So with that, let me set a little bit of context before I discuss what are the techniques that we used to solve or to basically mitigate some of the risks with not doing user experience designing incrementally. So about the context. This was a client who was a neutral child. And he wanted to launch a product. And the product was going to be a digital wallet. And he wanted to explore a market picture.