UX Circuit Training - Delivered at Fluxible 2013 and the KW Girl Geek Dinner

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Many UX practitioners learn by doing and researching on the fly. This approach can also help those who want to develop their careers, who feel stuck in a narrow role when job postings seem to be looking for unicorns. Kate draws on her own experience and that of her peers.

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UX circuit trainingFor any fitness level

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@katewilhelm*

Logistics

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@katewilhelm*

What we’ll cover

Who are we?

The UX bits

Owning your career

UX resources

Leaving with a plan

How we’ll work

Informally

In groups

Toward a plan

Metaphor alert!

Metaphor alert!

No metaphors were harmed

…but a lot were used

…and mixed

Try to count them

Collect the whole set!

What you’ll have at the end

Ideas, resources, and strategies

A playbook with your game plan

Some energy and momentum (I hope!)

Who are we?

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@katewilhelm*

Who are you?

How much UX?

New?

Repositioning?

What draws you to it?

What do you want to get out of this?

Information architect at BlackBerry for 7 years

Led User Experience group

Love UX (there, I said it!)

Do this career stuff myself

What about me?

Recipes tested in the Kate kitchen!

http://www.thekitchn.com/

Little exercise

Make a title page for your book

Write down a statement that captures what you want

Share it with your group

Here’s an example…

I want to work in a role that is

Collaborative

Challenging

Strategic

And lets me learn

In an environment that is open and decent

The UX bits

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@katewilhelm*

UX is a house

elezea.com

Rian van der Mervwe (via Garrett): Structure with research foundation

Nope, it’s a honeycomb

Peter Morville: Aspects of UX as facets

semanticstudios.com

Here, let’s try this one…

benmelbourne.files.wordpress.com/

benmelbourne.files.wordpress.com/

UX designers

Ben Melbourne:

UX Designers focus on the structure and layout of content and how users interact with them. They don’t normally (but can) try to be perfect from a visual perspective.

Trip O’Dell:

We solve problems for people with technology or services.

Another way to look at it

Trip O’Dell framed it nicely:

Storyteller

Artisan

Storyteller

Radical generalist who is really curious and likes to engage with stakeholders, users, and develop a vision:

Empathetic

User-focused

Strategic

Research

Artisan

…sweats the details whether it’s the easing in an animated transition, the polished comp, or the pixel-perfect CSS and assets that go from prototype to final shipping product:

Intensely focused

Passionate about craft

UX deliverables

Again from Mr. Melbourne:

The types of deliverables they produce include site-maps, user flows, prototypes and wireframes.

These depend on the problems you’re solving

Activity: If any of these are new to you, write them in your book

Discussion:

Where do you fit?

I fit in research and design

I influence visual design

What interests you?

Activity: Get it on paper

Take a minute to write it down:

Where you fit

What interests you

Example: Here’s what I did

Research

Myers-Briggs

Skills Inventory

Overkill?

Maybe

But it reinforced my decision

Career

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@katewilhelm*

What do recruiters want?

Someone is likely filtering on keywords

Looking for

Experience

Deliverables

Accomplishments

Not surprising…

What do recruiters, managers, & peers want?

Objectivity, openness, and self-awareness

Ability to present ideas clearly and confidently (good client manner)

Willingness to collaborate and listen to ideas

Ability to speak to the process

People who are…

People who aren’t

Arrogant, egotistical

Deceptive

Dramatic

Unwilling to compromise

Put simply…

Care and be interested

Communicate well

Keep a sense of humour

Don’t be a jerk

Career strategies

Own it

Formalize it

Document it

Stay current

Work with crushes

Don’t get comfortable

Career strategies

Lather

Rinse

Repeat

Own it! Strategies

Who do you want to own your career?

Define what you want

Done! (for now)

Create a plan

Use strategies

Create opportunities

Or my mantra…

Make your own sauce

www.theoatmeal.com/

Create opportunities

At work

Find gaps, identify needs

Get stretch assignments

Outside of work

Volunteer

Make your own assignments

Example: Here’s what I did

On a few occasions

Saw a need

Asked for a mandate

Did the work

Built credibility

For IA and UX work

Opportunities: Examples

Pro bono: Charity or cause

Your resume and portfolio

Make it a design problem

Include the career book you’re working on

Tackle something that has always bothered you

Create stories

Think about your process

Keep the artifacts

Have a story to tell about

Successes

Challenges

These are things you can share

LinkedIn

Join before you even worry about your resume

Get inspired by other profiles

Find jobs that are only posted there

Be there for recruiters to find

Letting it percolate

Which strategies look good to you?

What might get in your way?

Internal

External

Activity

Write down a few strategies that you could start next week

Resources

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@katewilhelm*

Activity

As we go through these resources:

Write down the ones that feel like a fit

Mention ones that you’ve found useful

Education

Cognitive Science

Human Computer Interaction

User Experience

Information Architecture

Information Science

A note on education

Attack of the feral professionals

The Unicorn Institute

www.aledlewis.com/

The Unicorn Institute

Skills gap:

Presenting

Facilitating

Critiquing

Storytelling

Sketching

Professionalism

Leadership

* Sound familiar?Soft skills!

Training

Adaptive Path UX Intensive

Cooper UX Boot Camp

Follow the UX Leader (CanCon!)

Human Factors International

Nielsen Norman Group Usability Week

Conferences

Adaptive Path UX Week

IA Institute IA Summit

IxDA Interaction

User Interface Engineering UI 18

UXcamp Ottawa

UXPA Conference

Conferences

And Fluxible, of course!

Organizations

UXPA

IxDA

IA Institute

uxWaterloo

CHI (in Toronto in 2014!)

Mentoring

Through a group

At work

Local

Remote

Be one too

Good things happen

Websites

A List Apart

Bill Buxton

Boxes and Arrows

Johnny Holland

LukeW Ideation and Design

More websites

Nielsen Norman Group

Smashing Magazine

UX Magazine

UX matters

Whitney Hess: Pleasure and Pain

Twitter

Lots of conversations

Can see who others follow

Can use lists

Example: I have lists of

Local web and UX

IA and UX

Twitter is useful

Twitter is a conversation

It’s easy to forget it’s a conversation….

Twitter: A sampling

Steve ‘Doc’ Baty@docbaty

Livia Labate@livlab

Dan Saffer@odannyboy

Kris Mauser@krismausser

Patrick Neeman@usabilitycounts

Christina Wodke@cwodtke

Jeff Parks@jeffparks

Peter Morville@morville

Twitter: A further sampling

Alan Cooper@MrAlanCooper

Whitney Hess@whitneyhess

Eric Reiss@elreiss

Beck Tench@10ch

Steve Portigal@steveportigal

Luke Wroblewski@lukew

Dana Chisnell@danachis

Kristina Halvorson@halvorson

Books: Cognitive Science

Books: Interaction Design

Books: Sketching and iteration

Books: Design

Books: Usability

Books: Process/activities

Activity

Which 2 books do you go to?

Defend!

Discuss!

Here’s my UX starter kit:

Leaving with a plan

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@katewilhelm*

Activity: Set goals

Write down 3 goals for

Next week

Next month

Next year

3 years from now

Activity: Define activities

Write down what you should do

Weekly

Examples: Read websites, record accomplishments

Monthly

Quarterly

Yearly

Example: Revisit and refine goals

Activity: Quick check

Look at your activities

Look at your goals

Make sure your activities get you there

If they don’t, you need to rethink something

Suggestion: Get meta!

Planning, researching, and prioritizing are part of UX

Treat these as deliverables:

your book

your planning and learning process

Same with your resume

Speaking of meta

Part of my process for this presentation

Could share as a portfolio piece

What now?

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@katewilhelm*

Let’s ruminate

What was

New

Surprising

Bad

Useful

www.friendsofkootenay.ca

Parting thoughts

@katewilhelm*

Own your career

It’s what you do and how you do it

Process

Artifacts

Relationships

Soft skills really matter

Not just what, but how

It’s worth repeating…

Care and be interested

Communicate well

Keep a sense of humour

Don’t be a jerk

Final thought

@katewilhelm*

Cory Lebson

It may be scary—Do it anyway

References

@katewilhelm*

Cory Lebson: These are my people: The Value in UX Organizations

Monique Valcour: Craft a Sustainable Career

Nick Finck: Starting a Career in User Experience Design

Dr. Leslie Jensen-Inman: Lone Geniuses or We Intentionality?

Peer support shout-outs

@katewilhelm*

Trip O’Dell

Kimberley Peter

Diana Wiffen

Kristina McDougall

Mary Pat Hinton

Steve Baty

Mark Connolly

Susie Simon-Daniels

Larry Cornett