Google Drive

Google Drive is widely loved for document creation, sharing, and real-time collaboration. However, as Drive becomes the default workspace for individuals and businesses alike, its file-management tools lag behind competitors like Finder, OneDrive, and iCloud Drive.

This project explored how Google Drive could better support organization, sorting, searching, and file movement (especially for users working inside large, deeply nested file systems).

UX Designer

1 month

Empathize

To find out, I looked to the competitors!

But much to my surprise, I found that Google Drive’s limited bulk deletion options were pretty similar across different platforms.

Instead of complaints about deletion, I found complicated opinions on the following areas:

Define

Grouping direct participant feedback revealed a completed different theme than I had originally suspected.

Notably, concerns about deleting files or storage limits appeared infrequently and lacked urgency.

Instead, users consistently emphasized the need to find, sort, and organize files more easily. This insight corrected the initial hypothesis and clarified that the real problem was not cleanup, but discoverability and organizational clarity.

Ideate

users can only see the parent folder, not their full path

advanced search features are hidden and underused

many users don’t know bulk actions are available

users must return to Drive to manage files

cannot sort by file size or date created

users can’t see the full destination path

Breadcrumbs are not just a visual element—they reflect system state. User flows were needed to map how breadcrumbs update as users navigate between folders, use search, open files, or move items. Mapping these paths ensured breadcrumbs remained accurate, persistent, and trustworthy across navigation patterns.

Moving a file is a high-risk action. User flows were essential to map how users expand folders, view hierarchy, confirm destinations, and recover from errors.

Search in Google Drive occurs in multiple contexts: the main Drive view, shared folders, and within creation tools like Docs, Sheets, and Slides. User flows helped define when filter chips appear, how they persist across searches, and how they reset or combine. This prevented filters from feeling hidden, overly complex, or unpredictable, and ensured users always understood why certain results were shown.

Prototype & Test

The focus at this stage was purely on layout, information hierarchy, and task flow efficiency. These wireframes allowed us to test the new progressive layout early and observe whether users understood the flow without UI polish or visual cues.

Comparative usability tests were conducted to evaluate all three proposed features, with a primary focus on the redesigned “Move to…” dialog and its tree-view structure. Participants completed identical file-organization tasks using both the existing Google Drive flow and the prototype.

Users completed file-movement tasks significantly faster with the tree view than with the existing drill-down model.

Users reported less hesitation, fewer backtracks, and reduced second-guessing during file movement.

4 out of 5 participants strongly preferred the prototype over the current Drive experience.

Visual hierarchy reduced misplacement errors by making folder relationships explicit.

“It’s nice to be able to move in and out faster.”

“That’s way better.”

“Wow, I can actually see where I’m moving it.

“I can visually map it out now.”

Displaying documents within the tree view (greyed out) to reinforce context without clutter

Adding drag-and-drop support to align with existing mental models

Larger expansion hit areas for easier scanning and interaction

Improved spacing and alignment to increase readability at a glance

Simplified iconography to reduce visual noise and cognitive load

Final Design

Previously Google Drive would collapse breadcrumbs after two folders.

With this feature add, persistent breadcrumbs keep users oriented at all times by clearly showing where they are in the folder hierarchy. This reduces unnecessary clicks, prevents disorientation, and builds trust when navigating deep or shared file systems.

The tree view replaces repetitive drilling with a scannable, side-by-side view of folder structure. Users move files faster, make fewer errors, and feel more confident choosing the correct destination.

Smart search filter chips bring advanced filtering directly into Docs, Sheets, and Slides rather than only in Google Drive. By surfacing filters where users already work, search becomes faster, more precise, and less dependent on memory or exact file names.

Impact & Takeaways

Usability testing demonstrated clear improvements compared to the existing Google Drive experience. Participants completed tasks faster, placed files more accurately, and reported higher confidence during navigation and file movement.

The redesigned concepts reduced hesitation, minimized second-guessing, and improved overall orientation within complex folder structures.