If I Was Starting My Career Today: Thoughts After 15 Years Spent In UX Design (Part 1)<\/h1>\nAndrii Zhdan<\/address>\n 2024-08-02T11:00:00+00:00
\n 2024-10-15T23:05:45+00:00
\n <\/header>\n
My design career began in 2008. The first book that I read on the topic of design was Photoshop Tips And Tricks<\/em><\/a> by Scott Kelby, which was a book about a very popular design tool, but not about user experience (UX) design itself. Back at the time, I didn\u2019t know many of the approaches and techniques that even junior designers know today because they weren\u2019t invented yet<\/em>, and also because I was just beginning my learning journey and finding my way in UX design. But now I have diverse experience; I\u2019m myself hiring designers for my team, and I know much more.<\/p>\nIn my two-part series of articles, I\u2019ll try to share with you what I wish I knew if I was starting my career today.<\/p>\n
\u201cIf you want to go somewhere, it is best to find someone who has already been there.\u201d<\/p>\n
— Robert Kiyosaki<\/a><\/p><\/blockquote>\nThe two-part series contains four sections, each roughly covering one key stage in your beginner career:<\/p>\n
\n- Master Your Design Tools<\/a><\/li>\n
- Work on Your Portfolio<\/a><\/li>\n
- Preparing for Your First Interviews: Getting a First Job<\/a><\/li>\n
- In Your New Junior UX Job: On the Way to Grow<\/li>\n<\/ol>\n
I\u2019ll cover the first three topics in this first article and the fourth one in the second article. In addition, I will include very detailed Further Reading<\/em><\/a> sections at the end of each part.<\/p>\nWhen you\u2019re about to start learning, every day, you will receive new pieces of evidence of how many things you don\u2019t know yet<\/em>. You will see people who have been doing this for years and you will doubt whether you can do this, too. But there is a nuance I want to highlight: first, take a look at the following screenshot:<\/p>\n<\/p>\n <\/p>\n
<\/p>\n
<\/a>\n Image source: versionmuseum.com<\/a>. (Large preview<\/a>)
\n <\/figcaption><\/figure>\nThis is the Amazon website in 2008 when I was about to start my design career and received my first paycheck as a beginner designer.<\/p>\n
And this is how Amazon looked like even earlier, in 2002:<\/p>\n
<\/a>Source: versionmuseum.com<\/a>. (Large preview<\/a>)<\/figcaption><\/figure>\nIn 2002, Amazon made 3.93 billion US dollars<\/a> in profits. I dare say they could have hired the very best designers at the time. So today, when you speak to a designer with twenty years of experience and think, \u201cOh, this designer must be on a very high level now, a true master of his craft,\u201d<\/em> remind yourself about the state of UX design that existed when the designer\u2019s career was about to start, sometime in the early 2000s!<\/p>\nA lot of the knowledge that I have learned and that is over five years old is outdated now, and the learning complexity only increases every year.<\/p>\n
\n
\n 2024-10-15T23:05:45+00:00
\n <\/header>\n
In my two-part series of articles, I\u2019ll try to share with you what I wish I knew if I was starting my career today.<\/p>\n
\u201cIf you want to go somewhere, it is best to find someone who has already been there.\u201d<\/p>\n
— Robert Kiyosaki<\/a><\/p><\/blockquote>\n
The two-part series contains four sections, each roughly covering one key stage in your beginner career:<\/p>\n
\n
- Master Your Design Tools<\/a><\/li>\n
- Work on Your Portfolio<\/a><\/li>\n
- Preparing for Your First Interviews: Getting a First Job<\/a><\/li>\n
- In Your New Junior UX Job: On the Way to Grow<\/li>\n<\/ol>\n
I\u2019ll cover the first three topics in this first article and the fourth one in the second article. In addition, I will include very detailed Further Reading<\/em><\/a> sections at the end of each part.<\/p>\n
When you\u2019re about to start learning, every day, you will receive new pieces of evidence of how many things you don\u2019t know yet<\/em>. You will see people who have been doing this for years and you will doubt whether you can do this, too. But there is a nuance I want to highlight: first, take a look at the following screenshot:<\/p>\n
<\/p>\n <\/p>\n
<\/p>\n
<\/a>
\n Image source: versionmuseum.com<\/a>. (Large preview<\/a>)
\n <\/figcaption><\/figure>\nThis is the Amazon website in 2008 when I was about to start my design career and received my first paycheck as a beginner designer.<\/p>\n
And this is how Amazon looked like even earlier, in 2002:<\/p>\n
<\/a>
Source: versionmuseum.com<\/a>. (Large preview<\/a>)<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n In 2002, Amazon made 3.93 billion US dollars<\/a> in profits. I dare say they could have hired the very best designers at the time. So today, when you speak to a designer with twenty years of experience and think, \u201cOh, this designer must be on a very high level now, a true master of his craft,\u201d<\/em> remind yourself about the state of UX design that existed when the designer\u2019s career was about to start, sometime in the early 2000s!<\/p>\n
A lot of the knowledge that I have learned and that is over five years old is outdated now, and the learning complexity only increases every year.<\/p>\n
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