Sean Isono
Experience Strategist & Lead Interaction Designer
Tokyo, JapanExperience Strategist / Lead Interaction Designer. Born in 1997. Graduated from Aoyama Gakuin University, College of Cultural and Creative Studies, majoring in Interaction Design. Engaged in HCI and interaction design research during studies, focusing on the conceptualization and design of digital services in healthcare settings.
After graduation, joined beBit (2018–2024), delivering UX consulting across manufacturing, e-commerce, finance, and more — spanning research-driven problem framing, strategy, service design, and interaction design. Joined Accenture Song in 2024 to lead service transformation projects for major clients. That same year, established Sean Design Consulting as an independent practice.
Specializes in B2B platforms, finance, insurance, and enterprise domains — from structuring upstream business challenges to final interaction design. Experienced across multiple English-language projects with teams in Singapore, the US, and India. Core strengths include AI-powered service prototyping, interface design, and cross-functional leadership in AI-integrated design.
Check CV ↗ROLE
Experience Strategist
COMPANY
Accenture Song
(freelance available)
LOCATION
Tokyo, Japan
EXPERIENCE
6+ Years in UX & Strategy
2018 – 2024
beBit
Experience Designer Consultant
Led research-driven product design for enterprise clients across Japan, bridging business strategy and user experience.
2024 – Present
Sean Design Consulting
Freelance Experience Strategist
Consulted for startups and scale-ups on product strategy, design systems, and end-to-end experience design.
2024 – Present
Accenture Song
Lead Strategic / Interaction Designer
Driving experience strategy and design leadership for global clients, integrating service design with digital transformation.
To design a symbiotic computational society where humans, nature, and technology resonate in harmony.
I believe the next frontier of design is not how things look — it's how humans feel inside the systems they inhabit.
My research explores the intersection of Human-Computer Interaction and physical embodiment: how tactile, spatial, and sensory experiences can make digital environments feel less isolating and more alive.
Design, to me, is the act of giving ambiguous problems a shape that humans can navigate.