


Year
2025
Industry
Renewable Energy (Solar Energy)
Location
Mumbai, India
Services
Logo Design,
Branding,
UX Research,
Website Strategy,
Information Architecture,
UI Design,
Project Overview
Designing clarity for a new clean-energy category
India’s transition towards renewable and sustainable energy is accelerating, but for many industrial and commercial businesses, the path to get there is still unclear. The opportunity is evident; the process, far less so. Kind Energy operates at this intersection, building solar and energy-storage solutions backed by intelligent optimisation, while helping businesses understand how to make the shift in practical terms.
As a brand in a fast growing and relatively new segment, KindEnergy’s challenge wasn’t just about visibility. It was about explanation, trust, and adoption, making a complex offering feel accessible, credible, and actionable.


Challenge
Bringing clarity to a complex, emerging market
While the demand for clean energy is rising, the category is crowded with technical language, fragmented information, and over-promised narratives. Fo rmany businesses, the gap isn’t intent, it’s understanding. How does the transition work? What does it mean operationally?Where do they begin?
Kind Energy needed a brand and digital presence that could simplify the story without diluting it, guiding users from their pain points to a clear, confident solution.

Approach
Designing for clarity before persuasion
I led the creation of the logo and website, focusing on communication first and aesthetics second. The goal was to build a system that feels clear, precise, and easy to navigate–one that structures information in a way that naturally leads users from problem to solution.
The visual language was intentionally restrained. Astrong black and orange palette was chosen to evoke solarenergy, strength,and reliability, while keeping the interface minimal and focused. Interaction was used sparingly, in service of clarity rather than spectacle, ensuring the experience stays accessible to a wide business audience.
The navigation of the website was designed to do the heavy lifting–introducing the problem, framing the opportunity, and then clearly positioning Kind Energy’s offering as a practical, scalable path forward.


Execution
Designing a website that guides before it convinces
Instead of treating the website as a container for information, the experience was designed as a guided path, one that anticipates questions and leads users from uncertainty to clarity. In a category defined by technical complexity and high-stakes decisions, the real risk is cognitive overload. To avoid that, the interface was deliberately pared back and every section was structured with intention.
The layout and hierarchy are built to prioritise understanding before persuasion. Content is sequenced to move from the problem of energy transition to the logic of the solution, allowing users to follow the narrative in clear, measured steps rather than being confronted with feature-heavy explanations.
Motion is used only where it adds continuity. Subtle transitions connect sections and support the flow of the story, without competing for attention. This restraint keeps the experience calm and confident, even as it explains a multi-layered offering.

Outcome
Positioning trust in a fast-moving category
The result is a brand and digital presence that helps Kind Energy speak with clarity in a rapidly evolving market. The website that does two things at once: its implifies a complex subject and builds credibility through clarity, guiding users from pain point to solution through a connected, well-paced digital experience.
It gives the company a credible, structured way to explain what they do, why it matters, and how businesses can engage with them. More than a visual refresh, the project created a communication platform, one that supports both immediate business need sand long-term positioning in India’s clean-energy transition.

“Nandin didn’t treat me as a client. He took over the ownership of the project like his own, he suggested me many opportunities to build this better and efficiently. The design came out great, but the initiative and effort behind this is absolutely the thankful. ”
Prateek Bajaj
CEO, Kind Energy