3. U…what…?
What is User Experience (UX)?
“User experience
encompasses all aspects of
the end-user’s interaction
with the company, its
services, and its products.
- Jakob Nielsen and Don Norman
http://www.nngroup.com/articles/definition-user-experience/
The UX Industry & You | Rebecca Destello
4. U…what…?
“User experience is the totality of the
effect(s) felt by a user as a result of
interaction with… a system, device, or
product, including the influence of
usability, usefulness, and emotional
impact during interaction, and savoring
the memory after interaction.
- Hartson and Pyla
PPeeoopplele
uussiningg
technolog
y (mostly)
technolog
y (mostly)
& how it
makes
them feel
& how it
makes
them feel
With credit to Emma Rose, PhD
The UX Industry & You | Rebecca Destello
6. Why you should be interested
in a career in UX
The UX Industry & You | Rebecca Destello
7. Why not?
High satisfaction: Most UX professionals love what they
do, because their work is fulfilling and the jobs pay well.
You might be a UX person if ...
You love good design
You like to organize things
You’re the one who always spots the bugs in software
or typos on the restaurant menu
You are a life long learner
You are a people person
Source: User Experience Careers Report by Farrell and Nielsen
The UX Industry & You | Rebecca Destello
11. Architectural vs. UX Roles
Adapted from http://www.slideshare.net/rwinzenburg/ux-roles-and-job-titles
Surveyor Move Planner &
Closet Organizer
Interior
Designer
Drywaller &
Brick Layer
Plumber &
Electrician
Architect
User
Researcher
Interaction
Designer
Information
Architect
User Interface
Designer
Front End
Developer
Back End
Developer
The UX Industry & You | Rebecca Destello
12. UX Roles explained
Interaction
Designer
•Interviewing
•Wireframe
•Prototypes
•Work Flow (usability)
•Excel
•Silverback, Captcha
•Omnigraffle, Visio
•InDesign, Axure
•Fireworks, HTML
Information
Architect
•Content Inventory
•Card Sorting
•Labeling
•Navigation
•Thesauri
•Search
•Controlled
Vocabulary
•Excel
•Optimal Sort
User Interface
Designer
•Design Principles
•Usability
•Typography
•HTML/CSS
•Photoshop
•Illustrator
•Fireworks
•JQuery
Front End
Developer
•HTML
•CSS
•JQuery
•JavaScript
•Flash/Flex
•ActionScript
User
Researcher
•Field studies
•Personas
•Observation
•Focus groups
•Usability testing
•Morae
•Ovo Studios
•Excel
•Word
•SPSS
•PowerPoint
UX Designer Interactive Designer
Adapted from http://www.slideshare.net/rwinzenburg/ux-roles-and-job-titles
The UX Industry & You | Rebecca Destello
13. 2 common roles
User
Researcher
UX
Designer
The UX Industry & You | Rebecca Destello
14. UX Designer
Job titles
UX designer, UX architect,
interaction designer (IxD), UI
designer, information architect,
visual designer
Must be good with
Creating solid design from fuzzy
ideas, keeping up with current
trends, thinking outside the box,
creative thinking, color theory,
design theory
User Experience
Designer
UUXX UUnniiccoorrnn!!!!
+ extra points if you understand
code and usability
The UX Industry & You | Rebecca Destello
15. User Researcher
Job titles
UX researcher, user researcher, usability
analyst, usability specialist, UX tester,
UX consultant
Must be good with
Making people feel at ease, interviewing,
listening, analysis, collecting loads of
information and distilling it into
meaningful data, public speaking
User
Researcher
The UX Industry & You | Rebecca Destello
UUXX PPeeggaassuuss!!!!
+ extra points if you
understand
design theory
17. Get hired
If you’re not sure what you want to do – apply for what
interests you and learn more through interviewing.
Specialize, but don’t pigeon hole yourself.
Consider contract or freelance work to gain experience.
Use an agency.
Have a portfolio.
The UX Industry & You | Rebecca Destello
18. “The purpose of a portfolio is to create a sense of personal
ownership over one's accomplishments, because ownership
engenders feelings of pride, responsibility, and dedication.”
- Paris, S & Ayres, L. (1994) Becoming Reflective
The UX Industry & You | Rebecca Destello
19. First, a note about portfolio types
The UX Industry & You | Rebecca Destello
20. There are 2 types of portfolios
Website vs. Deck
Website portfolios are good for
• Lots of projects
• Show ALL of your work in one place
• Representing yourself online
PPT decks are good for
• One or two projects
• Talk about one or two projects in depth
• Representing yourself during an interview
The UX Industry & You | Rebecca Destello
21. This one’s about deck portfolios
The UX Industry & You | Rebecca Destello
22. Deck portfolios
Your portfolio should be simple. Forget fancy
transitions and layouts - focus on storytelling.
Must haves
Your name
A tagline (what you do)
Past work examples (details about the project,
what it looked like before and after,
challenges, and what your role was)
A list of your skills
An “About Me” page with a way to contact you
The UX Industry & You | Rebecca Destello
24. S.O.A.R.
SOAR is a handy formula for discussing your accomplishments.
Situation: What challenge were you faced with?
Objective: What did you hope to accomplish?
Action: What action(s) did you take?
Result: What resulted from your action(s)?
The UX Industry & You | Rebecca Destello
25. S.O.A.R. example
Situation
It was breakfast time and there was no cereal in the house.
Objective
Breakfast is the most important meal of the day, therefore it is important
to eat something before going to school.
Action
After investigating around the kitchen, I was able to combine cooked
oats, raisins, cashews, and a little bit of honey to create a healthy
alternative
to cereal.
Result
By combining these ingredients with milk, I was able to create a
new breakfast meal that helped me make it through the day.
The UX Industry & You | Rebecca Destello
26. “I've learned that people will forget what you said, people
will forget what you did, but people will never forget how
you made them feel.”
- Maya Angelou
The UX Industry & You | Rebecca Destello
27. Deck portfolio tips
• Read the book "Presentation Zen” by Reynolds & Duarte.
• Having a meter on every slide that shows where you are in
the presentation (to give a sense of progress).
• Have an agenda slide. People should know what to expect.
• Don't use slide transitions (aka: strip tease presentation).
• Always practice with a friend beforehand.
• Give credit where credit is due. Be explicit about your
participation in projects and of what you accomplished.
• End with your contact info.
The UX Industry & You | Rebecca Destello
28. Public Speaking 101
• Make eye contact.
• Don't fidget, stand straight, comfortable, and
professional.
• Speak slowly at a normal volume.
• Always stop to ask if anyone has questions.
• Know your material. Don't just read the screen.
• Don't be afraid to let your personality come through.
• SMILE! Remember, you love doing UX work!
The UX Industry & You | Rebecca Destello
29. Network!
Join special interest groups, get memberships, go to
conferences, attend meetups, join LinkedIn
(www.linkedin.com/in/rebeccadestello)
The UX Industry & You | Rebecca Destello
30. Examples
A few deck portfolio examples…
UX Designers
• brynnevans.com/files/portfolio.pdf
• laura-simpson.com/wp-content/
uploads/2012/06/lsimpson_UXportfolio20121.pdf
UX Researchers
• userpages.umbc.edu/~huijuan1/file/HuijuanWu_Portfolio.p
df
• mukeshnathan.net/assets/nathan-portfolio.pdf
The UX Industry & You | Rebecca Destello