One of the most meaningful, enjoyable convos I've ever had. Kudos to Zack for a truly amazing job, for creating an inviting, open, conversational atmosphere; guests are only ever as good as the host.
💯⚡️📹 Great insight. I wanted to know what UX complications does Josh see frequently in newcomers to the design field I recently made a video about improving your UX design career by removing such complications in your design career Would love to know Josh's thoughts on this ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-k1U6f0lJCkE.html
Check out Discovery Kanban - Patrick Steyart. (I'm also happy to talk with you about it). It's a process I'd take your tool's output (Aurelius) to to manage the continued flow from research to decisions to comparative analysis and selection for committing to work.
I think it comes down to validation. Put your solution in front of a user and see if it solves the problem. There are schools of thought around this, like IBM's Design Thinking or Google's Design Week. Production processes like Kanban and Scrum accommodate design and strategy, but don't prescribe a process for it; it just magically gets done. There's a quote that goes, "fall in love with the problem, not the solution." Wyatt Earp is saying the same thing. Don't focus too much on the speed, the point is to deliver the bullet to the right place at the right time. Speed supports that, but speed alone is not the criterion for success. First, meet the goal, then do it faster. If you are in love with your solution, you are less likely to validate it because you might find out that it has to change.