Online therapy platform / Georgia

OneHug - Online Psychology Platform with Booking, Payments and Video Consultations for Georgia

OneHug is an online therapy platform case focused on specialist discovery, booking, payments, video consultations, dashboards and trust-first UX. Localized English version for Georgia.

Market
Online therapy
Screens
2
Stack
8

Project visuals

How the project looks

Screenshots show the visible product, not a generic service promise.

OneHug desktop screenshot
OneHug desktop homepage
OneHug mobile screenshot
OneHug mobile homepage

Project work

What changed in the project

A quick read of the problem, goal, solution and outcome before the detailed page structure.

01 Problem

An online therapy product had to make specialist choice, scheduling, payment and video consultation feel trustworthy and manageable.

02 Goal

Reduce uncertainty for clients and give therapists a clear workflow from profile discovery to booked consultation.

03 Solution

We structured the product around specialist profiles, booking steps, payment flow, video sessions, dashboards and trust-first content.

04 Result

The case shows a full platform experience where visitors can understand the service, choose a specialist and move toward a paid session.

Scope

  • Specialist discovery Profiles and filters help visitors compare therapists before booking.
  • Booking flow Scheduling, payment and session context are connected in one user journey.
  • Dashboards Client and specialist views support consultations after the first conversion.

Signals

Project market
Online therapy
Page type
Booking platform

Page structure

How the work is organized

These blocks show what the visitor can evaluate on the project page: offer, trust, SEO coverage, conversion path and implementation logic.

01

Entry logic

First screen and decision path

The first screen must reduce anxiety and show that the product supports a full consultation journey.

Project signal

A therapy platform with specialist discovery, booking, payments, video consultations and dashboards. onehug.co

Market context

Online therapy

User path

Clients need to feel safe choosing a specialist, while therapists need a clear workflow after booking.

02

Information architecture

Services, categories and page routes

The page structure follows the user path from specialist choice to booked and paid consultation.

Service map

Specialist profiles, filters, booking slots, payments, video sessions, client and therapist dashboards.

Page logic

The page structure follows the user path from specialist choice to booked and paid consultation.

Content blocks

The first screen must reduce anxiety and show that the product supports a full consultation journey.

03

Trust and conversion

Proof, CTA and request context

Trust is built through profile context, service clarity, payment safety and session expectations. The conversion path moves from discovery to schedule selection, payment and consultation context.

Trust layer

Trust is built through profile context, service clarity, payment safety and session expectations.

CTA path

The conversion path moves from discovery to schedule selection, payment and consultation context.

Request context

Clients need to feel safe choosing a specialist, while therapists need a clear workflow after booking.

04

Growth layer

How the structure can scale

The platform can grow through specialties, languages, therapist profiles and repeat-session workflows.

SEO growth

The platform can grow through specialties, languages, therapist profiles and repeat-session workflows.

Operations

Dashboards and admin flows keep sessions, user status and consultation context manageable.

Next iteration

The next iteration is stronger matching logic, retention flows and clearer therapist availability proof.

Project FAQ

Questions this case answers

Short answers about what was built, why the structure matters and how the same approach can apply to a similar project.

01 What does the OneHug case show?

The case shows OneHug as an online therapy booking platform for online therapy. The page focuses on a therapy journey with specialist discovery, booking, payments, video sessions and client/therapist dashboards instead of a generic company story.

02 What exactly was built in the project?

The work on OneHug covered specialist profiles, filters, availability, booking, payment flow, video consultation and dashboard states. This connects the visible page, content and user scenarios into one project result.

03 How does the project guide users toward a request?

In OneHug, the conversion logic is that the user moves from choosing a therapist to selecting a time, paying and entering the consultation context. CTAs, forms and content therefore stay tied to a specific user intent.

04 How do FAQ and structure support SEO and project growth?

For OneHug, the SEO logic is that the structure can grow through specialties, therapist profiles, languages and repeat-session scenarios. FAQ adds direct answers to questions users ask before taking action.

05 What can be reused in a similar project?

A similar project can reuse the approach: booking, payments, video and dashboard logic connect the user-facing product with operational workflows. The important part is to preserve what makes OneHug specific: the project had to build trust around a sensitive decision, not just show a list of therapists.