Role
Content Design Lead
Platform
Messenger iOS
Timeline
6 Weeks
Skills
AI Assisted Workflows
Figma
Engagement Design · Meta · Messenger
Unwatched Content Reminders
Helping people reconnect with content shared in their conversations — without feeling watched, judged or interrupted.


01 — Overview
Reconnecting people with content they almost missed
Messenger users often receive content from friends and groups but don't always engage with it immediately. As conversations move on, shared content gets buried — creating missed moments of connection. I led content strategy across notification and in-product reminder surfaces, developing frameworks that resurfaced content in a way that felt helpful rather than intrusive.
The core tension
"The challenge wasn't simply reminding people. It was determining how to do so in a way that felt helpful rather than intrusive."
Every language decision had downstream effects on engagement, trust, privacy perception, and localization. This project was as much about what not to say as what to say.
02 — The Challenge
Two problems hiding inside one feature
1
Language complexity
Terms like "unwatched," "unopened," and "unviewed" focused on what users had failed to do, felt overly technical, introduced localization challenges, and added unnecessary cognitive load.
2
Privacy perception
Personal relevance language risked making users feel monitored. Trust vs. engagement is a real tension.
03 — Content Strategy
Reframing failure as opportunity
Instead of focusing on what users had failed to do, I reframed reminders around discovery and social connection. This single shift changed the entire emotional register of the feature.
Before — Failure framing
Unwatched Reel
You haven't watched this yet
After — Discovery framing
Check out this reel
Catch up on videos from your chats
04 — Three frameworks. Three different bets.
Each framework carried different implications for engagement, clarity, and emotional resonance — developed to structure the experiment strategy.
Framework A
Utility
Focus on reminding users about content they received.
Sarah
Check out the reel Sarah sent you.
Framework B
Social Connection
Focus on the person who shared the content, not the content itself.
Sarah
Sarah shared something with you on Messenger.
Framework C
Conversation Continuity
Focus on reconnecting users with ongoing conversations.
Friends Group
Catch up on content shared in your chat.



05 — Statistically significant re-engagement. Zero regressions.
+0.79%
XMA clicks
+1.05%
Facebook opens
+0.37%
iPhone Session Cap15
+0.35%
Uncapped iPhone sessions
What I learned
Effective content design is often about what you choose not to say
A reminder system built around "unwatched content" could have easily felt intrusive or judgmental. By shifting language toward discovery, social connection, and conversation continuity, we created an experience that encouraged engagement without sacrificing trust.
This project also highlighted how content designers can influence experimentation strategy — not simply by writing copy, but by shaping how a product frames user behavior at a fundamental level.