Mar 4, 2024
215 Views
Comments Off on Advanced Figma tricks, nightmare UX job, content design playbook
1 0

Advanced Figma tricks, nightmare UX job, content design playbook

Written by

Weekly curated resources for designers — thinkers and makers.

“Just like so many times lately, I had turned my camera off, even though it was the department meeting with all my design peers and leaders. It was unusual for someone to turn off their camera during this call but I was burned out, had developed a social anxiety, and just couldn’t bring myself to show my face, let alone speak.

‘Where did it all go so wrong?’, I was thinking.”

How my dream design job turned into a nightmare
By Matej Latin

Dive into the world of user research with The Optimal Path Podcast
[Sponsored] Learn how the best organizations leverage research to inform stronger decision-making. UX leaders at Figma, Zapier, and more talk to Maze about the approaches used to unlock continuous insights — and the optimal path for product success. Tune in.

Editor picks

I reviewed the Terms & Conditions of popular gen AI tools
The ethical and legal implications.
By David SerraultThe power of patterns and playbooks in content design
Building a content design system.
By Kate Agena, PhDPrivacy, politics, and porn
Shining a light in the darkest corners of the internet.
By Luis Berumen Castro

The UX Collective is an independent design publication that elevates unheard design voices and helps designers think more critically about their work.

The most minimal sites on the web, curated in one place →

Make me think

There are no original ideas. But…
“Mark Twain is believed to have said ‘There is no such thing as an original idea.’ The implication is that, as a species, we are constantly building on what came before us: inspired and driven by what we’ve seen and experienced. Personally, I like to phrase a similar sentiment as ‘There are no original ideas. But there are original executions.”How we make sense of time
“Ask English speakers about the difference between yesterday and tomorrow, and they might thrust a hand over the shoulder when referring to the past and then forward when referring to the future. Such unreflective movements reveal a fundamental way of thinking in which the past is at our backs, something that we ‘leave behind,’ and the future is in front of us, something to ‘look forward’ to.”All parasites have value
“We judge our own productivity, our hustle, and even our ambition as if they indicate our value to society. We try to keep making at all costs for fear that we might be mistaken for taking.”

Little gems this week

Makeup, body paint, tattoos, and your Instagram filters
By Olesia Vdovenko

Creativity lies in the paradoxes
By Ida Persson

Age diversity in design: lessons from Thor to Masako and beyond
By Darren Yeo

Tools and resources

Advanced Figma tips & tricks
The little gems we love.
By Christine VallaureThe 3 capabilities designers need for AI
The reverse reckoning of UX design.
By Alex KleinHow to save your product UX when the AI goes wrong
Managing prediction errors in AI products.
By Gautham Srinivas

Support the newsletter

If you find our content helpful, here’s how you can support us:

Check out this week’s sponsor to support their work tooForward this email to a friend and invite them to subscribeShare open positions on our job boardSponsor an edition

Advanced Figma tricks, nightmare UX job, content design playbook was originally published in UX Collective on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.

Article Categories:
Technology

Comments are closed.