MDR Website Direction
Consolidation Brief
Consolidated from a 16-person internal team survey, 20+ brand case studies, and team alignment sessions. This document captures the agreed direction for the MDR/LZ website — use it to guide design and development.
Internal Survey Findings
Key findings from the internal survey (n = 16 respondents, Jan 27 – Feb 1, 2026)
Want BOTH emotional warmth AND clarity — neither alone is enough
Rated "clarity of product" as the single highest priority (5/5 stars)
Said MDR should feel like a unique brand, not a copy of Apple/DJI/Rivian
Top trust signal: real-world footage of the camera in action
The team overwhelmingly wants a website that leads with both emotional appeal AND functional clarity. The hero should show LZ in a real environment doing something useful, with personality. The site must clearly communicate what LZ does while building trust that it's a real, purchasable product.
Hero Section Instinct
When asked "what should be the first thought when opening the website," responses split into two camps: "LZ is a cool-looking robot that can help me" (utility + form) and "LZ is a presence/friend I can bond with" (emotional connection). The ideal hero captures both — LZ in a real home, doing something useful, with personality visible.
Brand Comparisons
Team members compared MDR to: Whisker, Sunday.ai, 1x.tech, Rivian, Apple, Bambu Lab, DJI, and several niche brands (Echowave, Maikasui, Midlife Engineering, Noovo, Firefly). The diversity confirms MDR needs its own identity — no single brand is the template. The closest emotional matches were Whisker (home robot, trust) and Rivian (lifestyle, premium).
5 Principles from 20+ Brand Studies
From studying Apple, Rivian, DJI, GoPro, Bambu Lab, 1x.tech, Whisker, and others, we identified 5 principles the best product websites follow:
Open with Emotion
Lead with lifestyle, identity, and presence. Let people imagine living with LZ. Emotion earns attention — but alone is not sufficient for commitment.
Structure & Clarity
Once emotion is established, transition quickly into content sections, clear hierarchies, easy navigation. Users need to understand what and why without prolonged exploration.
Trust Signals
Real use cases, demonstrations, support info, warranty details build trust. Trust is a primary UX function — not hidden in footer details.
Balanced UX
Great UX has balance in all directions. Avoid extremes: too much emotion without clarity, too much info without warmth, too much atmosphere without guidance.
Conversion from Confidence
The strongest brands don't feel aggressive or sales-driven. They are calm. CTAs are repeated but natural. People commit when they feel comfortable, informed, and aligned.
What to Avoid
not enough clarity
not enough warmth
not enough guidance
What to Learn From
What to Avoid
The Website Experience Flow
Based on survey data and research, the team aligned on this experience flow:
Emotion First
Hero section: LZ in a real home environment, doing something useful, personality visible. One shot that tells the whole story. Cinematic but grounded.
Structure & Clarity
Immediately follow with clear sections: what LZ does, how it works, key capabilities. Clean hierarchy, easy to scan. Specs paired with visuals.
Trust Signals
Real-world footage, press coverage, testimonials, warranty/support info. Trust is earned, not declared. Show, don't tell.
Confident Conversion
Calm, well-placed CTAs. No aggressive sales. People commit when they feel comfortable, informed, and emotionally connected.
LZ's website should feel like: opening the door to your home and seeing a trusted companion waiting for you — warm, capable, and real. Not a tech demo. Not a mood film. A product you want to live with, presented with the confidence of a brand that knows exactly what it is.
Design Directions Tested
The team reviewed multiple prototype directions, each inspired by a different brand approach:
Direction A — Apple-inspired
Clean, minimal, product-centered. Strong visual hierarchy. Risk: may feel too cold for a home robot.
Direction B — Rivian-inspired
Lifestyle-first, cinematic. Adventure and identity. Risk: may lack product clarity.
Direction C — DJI-inspired
Technical mastery meets emotion. Specs prominent but aspirational. Risk: may feel too technical.
Direction D — Bambu Lab-inspired
Utility and competence forward. Community-driven. Risk: may lack emotional warmth.
Direction E — GoPro-inspired
Content-first, user-generated feel. Product proven by output. Risk: LZ's footage capabilities still early.
Direction F — 1x.tech-inspired
Premium warmth, full-bleed macro photography, generous whitespace. Risk: may feel too abstract without trust layer.
No single direction is the answer alone. The strongest approach combines 1x.tech's premium warmth and visual craft with Rivian's lifestyle storytelling, grounded by Whisker's pain-point-first trust building and Apple's instant clarity. Avoid Anker's catalog feel, Maika Sui's vagueness, and Whisker's aggressive CTAs.