(Some of y’all better try that pancake recipe 😤😤) Hello welcome back to a working vlog! Lil life update because it’s my 6 month anniversary of changing my career path and finding this job! Yay Hope you enjoyed and sending you a big warm hug for the winter chills 💓 Can’t wait to see you in the next one!
I have worked in a marketing department of a corporate company as an intern. Out of all the work that I was presented with, design of anything from posters to web pages to slide templates was something that I enjoyed the most. It was like the time flied when I was trying to find out ideas, right colors, best fonts ... Now I saw your vlog and UI/UX design is something I definitely want to try out! Love your channel😍 Keep up the great work!😚
I have to say this is an amazing life so cozy I hope I will get to this remote position one day. Thank you for sharing your personal life. Sending love and kisess.
New subscriber here! Love how easy it is to watch your content. Secondly, If I wanted to pick up UI/UX as a hobby to see if I would actually enjoy this as a career, where do you suggest I start (beginner with no experience)? :) Thank you!
Hi Lily! My name is Bella and I'm your new subs. I love watching your video as I also planning on changing my career to UI/UX designer. Tbh I'm trying to find my niche and thanks to you I got a glimpse of a UX perspective but I don't have any basic design skill, do you hv any suggestion where can I even start? Thanks Nice to meet you btw😃
UX designer) you may not even touch figma, then the digital designer (UI designer) may take over. So for your portfolio make sure you have your designs and solutions backed up by research, do user testing and make sure to iterate the design based on feedback. I study UX design in uni btw currently :) goodluck on your journey
@@abbyz9790 typically it doesn't involve coding, it is a plus if you understand how coding works though and know basics because it will help you communicate with the developers, and make you understand better what designs are feasible, and how a small change in the design may = a lot of work for the developers, etc which means it may not always be worth to make that change. UI and UX design overlap a lot, so it is very hard to understand the difference between them, but what is typical for UX design is: - research (figure out the users pain points) and what do they want to see in a platform and what would benefit them? - test your design solutions at an early stage, could just be sketches, go out, find your target group (put them into a scenario etc) (ask them open questions) - iterate with the feedback, do this a few times - deliver a "solution", that works well for your target group and solves their pain points (or the ones you decided to focus on) At this point, you do not need to have a hi-fi figma prototype, it depends on the company it seems like, but your job as a ux designer is to make your users interaction with the service smooth and hassle free, but also developing something that they actually want to use. When it comes to bootcamps, I don't know of anyone who personally has experience from that and with a job, but I've heard online that it is possible. I think it also depends on what country you're in, if you're in a big city or not, if your country values education a lot or not etc
I hope you get that promotion!! I just started watching your videos and I love how assured and confident and at peace you are with yourself! I'm hoping to reach that point with myself as well. Also can you send the link for your FB book club? I would love to join but when I searched on FB, I saw there's actually so many book clubs with that same title lol
Can you get feedback on Figma from a general community or were you doing this with an internal group of coworkers? Also, you are great at explaining things, go on girl! :D