Confidence through preparation
Feeling ready before the engine starts, not just after years in the saddle.
Connected. Confident. Coached.
A guided riding system pairing a mobile app with a smart-glove prototype, built to help new motorcyclists feel coached, confident, and safe without adding distraction on the road.
Team: Christopher Mueller & Sanghavi Vijayakumar
Shandoka Motorcycles asked us to make the first months of riding less intimidating for new motorcyclists. We designed Rydo: a guided riding system pairing a mobile app with a smart-glove prototype that coaches riders in real time and connects them to a trusted community.
The goal was simple to state and hard to solve: help beginners feel coached, confident, and safe without adding distraction on the road.



The gap between passing a safety course and feeling genuinely competent is wide, lonely, and often unsafe. Existing apps pile on features and notifications, exactly the wrong thing to hand someone managing a 400-pound machine at speed.
We framed the challenge around three needs:
Feeling ready before the engine starts, not just after years in the saddle.
Guidance that keeps a rider's eyes up and hands on the bars.
Small, trusted groups instead of large, competitive, chaotic rides.

Secondary research, four in-depth rider interviews, and two journey maps covering solo and group rides.

Four in-depth conversations with new riders, exploring how they prepare, what scares them, and what would actually make them ride more.
“You feel safe when you're prepared, not just when you're experienced.”
“There's no app yet that lets you ride freely while knowing your group is safe and coordinated.”
“I just like the simple ride, enjoying nature.”
Mapping a new rider's first independent loop surfaced exactly where confidence wavers, and where Rydo could step in. Scroll across the ride.
Checks weather, gears up, chooses a short route.
“Am I ready for this?”
😬 Nervous · ⚖️ UnsureStarts bike, balances, eases off the clutch.
“Don't stall. Don't stall.”
😰 High tensionPractices turns and stops, scanning driveways.
“Am I doing this right?”
😐 Focused but alertReacts to a car, dog, or gravel.
“Oh no!”
😳 Startled · ❤️ Adrenaline spikePulls in, shuts the bike off, reflects.
“Was that good or bad?”
😮💨 Relief · 🙂 Mixed confidence

A careful late-bloomer who wants to progress safely, not compete.
An adrenaline-first rider who finds safety messaging preachy.
A stripped-back interface that surfaces only navigation and hazard cues, so riders keep their eyes up.
Real-time hazard and turn cues delivered through haptics, replacing screen glances entirely.
Pairs riders by ability and pace, so beginners aren't pushed past their limits.
Adaptive guidance and post-ride feedback that builds confidence over time.
Exploring interface and interaction concepts on paper before committing to pixels. Tap any image to enlarge.







A working smart-glove that delivers turn and hazard cues through haptics, no screen required.
The Ride Mode, Coach, and group-coordination flows brought to life. Tap any image to enlarge.

In usability sessions, new riders understood the core flow without coaching and described Ride Mode as “calm.” The glove prototype validated the core bet: haptic alerts can replace screen glances entirely.
The clear next step is a longitudinal pilot to measure confidence gains across a full riding season.
Step through Ride Mode, the App Coach, and group coordination in the interactive prototype.
View App Prototype