The need for transparency in gender data and child protection in Indonesia continues to increase along with the rise in cases of violence, gender inequality, and the demand for data-driven decision-making at the regional government level. The Gender and Child Information System (SIGAB) of Banten Province is an important instrument; however, the existing version still faces challenges such as complex navigation, less communicative data visualization, and low comprehensibility of the displayed indicators. This study aims to redesign the SIGAB interface using the Design Thinking method through five stages: empathize, define, ideate, prototype, and test. Data were collected through semi-structured interviews and questionnaires to identify user needs as the basis for solution formulation. The ideation stage produced concepts emphasizing simplified navigation, more informative data visualization, and the addition of insight text to facilitate indicator interpretation. The redesign resulted in four main pages—Main Dashboard, Gender, Children, and Sectoral—designed with an aesthetic and minimalist approach, clear information hierarchy, and thematic color palettes. Usability testing showed a significant improvement, with a Task Success Rate of 94% and an increase in the System Usability Scale (SUS) score from 58.7 to 85.5. These findings indicate that a Design Thinking–based redesign is able to enhance efficiency, comprehensibility, and user satisfaction in accessing gender and child data in Banten Province.
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