Last active
December 11, 2015 07:28
-
-
Save erikflowers/4566691 to your computer and use it in GitHub Desktop.
A good answer to the "don't call yourself a UX designer" debate. It's doing more harm than good.
This file contains bidirectional Unicode text that may be interpreted or compiled differently than what appears below. To review, open the file in an editor that reveals hidden Unicode characters.
Learn more about bidirectional Unicode characters
http://aaronweyenberg.com/1934/why-im-not-a-ux-designer-and-neither-are-you/comment-page-1#comment-2661 | |
"UX Designer as a title seems meant to convey to recruiters | |
and teammates as an indicator of being evolved in one’s craft; | |
that you subscribe to Design Thinking. This moves the designer | |
away from the notion that designs are created in a vacuum, | |
without real human world context. It may also imply some | |
capability in UX Research, at least in observation and artifact | |
collection and generation. Point is, this posture is often | |
expected in the workplace and so the title is adopted. | |
Semantics do mean things to some people. | |
These are shifting times. We are socializing new job roles in | |
new kinds of work organizations. It is important to make | |
distinctions about such things as whether a designer is creating | |
an experience out of whole cloth that will be meaningful | |
to everyone the same way. The discomfort comes when we find | |
ourselves being skewed into role expectations differently | |
than the ways we see ourselves." |
Sign up for free
to join this conversation on GitHub.
Already have an account?
Sign in to comment