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Unparalleled insights tailored to empower your business.
Robust strategies with the agility demanded by today’s digital landscape.
Creating experiences that resonate with users and drive results.
Amsterdam companies rarely build for Amsterdam alone. The city offers EU market access as one of its defining advantages, which means most product teams here are designing with 27 member states in mind from day one. A product that works perfectly for a Dutch user and breaks down for a German enterprise buyer or a French compliance team has not solved the Amsterdam problem. It has solved a smaller, less useful one.
This changes what good design means in Amsterdam. It is not about local polish. It is about structural flexibility: an interface that can carry different languages, different regulatory disclosures, and different trust signals without falling apart at the seams. Most products are not built this way from the start. Most have to be redesigned to become this way.
Amsterdam is particularly strong in fintech, with scaleups such as Mollie and Adyen helping to shape the region's global reputation. These are companies that built their entire value proposition on making a complicated, high-stakes process feel completely frictionless. A merchant integrating Adyen does not think about the regulatory complexity underneath. They just see a payment that worked.
This has quietly reset the experience bar for every B2B and fintech product operating in Amsterdam's ecosystem. Enterprise buyers who use Mollie or Adyen daily bring that expectation into every other software evaluation. A product with a confusing onboarding or an opaque pricing structure does not just feel mediocre. It feels like a step backwards from what the market has already proven is possible.
Amsterdam offers a highly international talent pool and an English-speaking business culture, making it one of Europe's most attractive destinations for international founders. This is a market built by people who have already chosen to operate beyond their home country's borders. They are comfortable working with international partners and they evaluate those partners on capability, not proximity.
NetBramha has designed for 20 countries across 18 years, including European institutions like Oxford University Press and Springer Nature. The studio understands the specific challenge of designing one product experience that needs to feel native in multiple EU markets simultaneously. IST overlaps with Central European Time for live collaboration, and the engagement model is built for distributed, English-speaking teams from the outset.
If your product works well for Dutch users but creates friction the moment it reaches a German, French, or Nordic enterprise buyer, the experience layer is almost certainly where that friction lives.
NetBramha will tell you in 30 minutes whether that is true for your specific product and what addressing it would realistically involve.
No deck. No pitch. No proposal before we understand your product. Talk to NetBramha
billion+ lives impacted with design so far
250+ Clients
25+ Countries
20+ Industries






A startup or for a Fortune 500 company, we follow a methodical & consistent approach to every design project we work on
Research – In-depth analysis of users through qualitative & quantitative analysis, ethnographic research, heuristic evaluation (through design audits), & usability testing, along with detailed competitor analysis.
Strategy – Powered by the insights derived in the research stage, we then work towards building a customer-centric product roadmap aimed at enhancing growth, product stickiness & market capture, through increased user engagement.
Design – Rugged information architecture, product mock-ups, user interface design, detailed motion & microinteractions, and finally customized illustrations & icons that set the apt succinct identity for your final product.
Since our inception 17+ years back our work has impacted more than a billion+ users worldwide. We take great pride in making a difference with design.
As an award-winning studio from India, our expertise involves everything that is needed to design (or redesign) a great user experience, including
– Website & Web app UX design
– Mobile UI/UX experience
– Enterprise UX design
– Branding & Illustrations
All of which is facilitated by rugged user research, product strategy, design thinking & deep craft for design.
We care for - People. (our team, clients & users)
Our people are our biggest strength. We care for our team & each one of them is hand-picked. Our culture is what drives us. Our care for our customers to see their problem as ours & empathy for the users is what makes us tick.
We care for - Design. (craft, outcomes, process)
We are absolutely passionate about design. We contribute to the design community, build our expertise & hone our skills every single day. We truly believe that design can change the world for better.
We care for - Outcomes (results, wins, learnings)
We are result driven & backed with experience. Our clients trust us to deliver results across experiences. Clients like Google, Microsoft, Cisco, Intel, Infosys, Emaar etc have mandated us to design new products, scale existing products or disrupt a new market with design.
Amsterdam is home to global payments leaders like Adyen and Mollie, which has set an unusually high experience bar for every fintech and financial product operating in this market. Buyers and users here expect onboarding, checkout, and transaction flows to feel completely frictionless because the market leaders have already proven it is possible.
NetBramha's fintech and finance design practice has delivered payments UX at scale, including the BHIM NPCI redesign which produced a verified 3x increase in transaction volume.
Amsterdam companies rarely build for the Dutch market alone. Most are designing with EU-wide expansion in mind from day one, which means a product needs to accommodate different languages, different regulatory disclosure requirements, and different user trust signals without losing coherence.
NetBramha's information architecture and qualitative research practices are built to identify what is universal in a product experience and what needs to flex for different EU markets, drawing on experience designing for 20 countries.
Amsterdam has a strong enterprise SaaS and deep tech sector, anchored by companies like Messagebird and Miro and supported by research institutions like TU Delft and the University of Amsterdam. These products often carry genuine technical depth that needs to be made accessible to non-technical enterprise buyers.
NetBramha's research and information architecture services are designed to translate technical complexity into interfaces that feel immediately usable, without simplifying the underlying capability.