What design bootcamps and colleges didn’t teach you
“I don’t like this design, but I don’t know why.”
If I ask every designer who has heard of this client feedback before to clap once, we are probably going to hear a standing ovation around the world.
If I ask every designer who has heard of this client feedback before to clap once, we are probably going to hear a standing ovation around the world.
In design school, we rarely have ways to practice how to respond to tricky workplace dynamics and client drama.
Most school projects are blue-sky.
Most school…
“Job title: Junior Designer
Salary: The lowest level we can get away with for an entry-level job
Requirements: 5 years of experience and a degree in Design
Interview Process: Do a small project for us which we may use for free after we don’t hire you.
Perks: We have great culture and free snacks!”
Does this sound familiar to you? It sure does to me.
Young talents deserve better than this type of treatment from employers.
But why is this vicious cycle of “we want experience but we won’t give you a chance to build one” still a thing now…
Almost every day, I get asked this question by my beginner design students.
“Is the design field too saturated?”
Many students ask this question before they even start classes.
They want to know what they are getting into and if they can handle the answer once they find out from me.
Understandably, they are anxious.
Am I throwing money down the drain by entering into a field so competitive that there is very little chance I will get hired and get a return on my investment?
Will my portfolios and resumes even get read?
Am I good enough?
These questions…
Unexpected Learning From An Unlikely Experience
Last year, I made a huge financial mistake in real estate.
I wrote about my experience first on Medium with one simple intention — if any of my friends asks, I will send them the link to read the story instead of repeating the painful details to them over and over again.
It worked. Some of my friends thanked me for sharing my experience. One of my real estate friends shared my story link to educate her clients.
I felt good about it — at least my misjudgement will help someone else avoid similar…
The Duke and Duchess of Sussex are design-savvy entrepreneurs
Whatever your take on Harry and Meghan’s explosive Oprah interview is, chances are you can’t avoid hearing about it everywhere you go these days.
There is so much to unpack in this interview, but this is not what this article is about.
As a designer and entrepreneur myself, I have been observing this royal couple since they came out in public.
It is unfortunate that when one becomes famous (or born to be famous, in the case of Harry), one’s lives inevitably becomes a spectacle to be picked apart by opponents…
A few years ago, I became a judge at several international design awards.
One time, I was asked to judge over 1,600 entries at a huge award — in the span of a week!
Judging awards is usually a voluntary, non-paid activity experienced designers do as a service to the community and a way for us to discover new inspirations.
Judges at awards are very similar to hiring managers in companies.
We both determine the outcomes of candidates or entrants.
In the award world, it is a matter of winning or losing. …
“Maybe this is a stupid question, but what is the difference between a Product Designer and a UX Designer?”
Every few days, I hear different students of mine ask a variation of the same question.
I was going to write an article to explain all of these confusing job titles, as I do know what they mean — generally speaking.
Having been in the design industry for the past decade, I had my fair share of “rip my hair out” moments when I submitted hundreds of job applications, hoping to land the one.
It was not because I studied so…
These days, it seems like every other friend’s boyfriend’s colleague’s cousins want to become a UI/UX designer.
As a designer and educator that opened up a design school recently, I should be thrilled, right?
Not so fast.
When I decided to become an entrepreneur in my own industry, I became drawn to the education side of it accidentally.
I was looking to improve my public speaking skills for conferences and teaching was recommended to me as a way to practice speaking in public while getting paid for it.
Through introductions, I became an adjunct professor at several universities, an instructor…
My Desire For Control Almost Ruined Everything
Yesterday, I finally launched the first product of my almost 2-year-old creative education startup, Path Unbound.
As recent as a month or so ago, I was thinking of giving up and moving on to something else.
While I am relieved that it is finally going somewhere, there are so many lessons I learned in the past year that I wish I had known earlier.
A while ago, I started to teach design as a way to improve my public speaking skills. That’s when I had the idea to start my own design school.
…
Culture shocks can sometimes last for over a decade
In the summer of 2008, I hopped on a plane for the first time in my life and landed in the U.S. sixteen hours later.
It was the beginning of an era. Like they said, I had my whole life in front of me.
Almost 13 years later, I’m still here.
Reflecting back on my experience from a cultural perspective, I realized so much has changed.
Many people I met here have commented on how “American” I sound and feel. Personally, I admit that I feel the same way.