Keeping UX Top of Mind

What is UX Design?

In the world of design, there is an entire field devoted to “User Experience,” called “UX.” People often refer to UX design when talking about websites and apps, but user experience also encompasses the experience felt when using a physical product or seeing a graphic design.

What problem does the user have that I am going to solve with this message?


Designers try to think strategically about every aspect of an end user’s perspective while interacting with the services, products, and platforms we create. We frame every design decision toward the “how” of interactivity – font choice, text placement, how much text, spacing, imagery, color, navigation functionality, negative space, etc.

We try consider every angle of a marketing piece, whether it’s how straightforward checkout is on a website, the natural information flow of a brochure, or the placement of an ad within a magazine, and think about how the user will interact with it. Where are they coming from? What problem does the user have that I am going to solve with this message? In a nutshell, UX design is all about keeping the end user’s experience at the forefront of the design process.

While something might be beautiful, if it’s not functional and adaptive, it will not work long-term. But if it is functional and not beautiful, the right people probably aren’t ever going to see it, so we always have to strike a delicate balance. The goal of UX design is to create an experience that is functional, useful, and enjoyable for the user. There are three primary factors to consider when creating a user-centered experience – usability, look, and feel.

  • Usability – How easy is it for a user to interact with the product or service?

  • Look – How visually appealing is the product or service?

  • Feel – How functional and pleasurable is the experience with the product or service?

What is the difference between graphic design and UX design?

UX designers and graphic designers share similar skills such a creative thinking, emotional design, and attention to detail that can serve as a launchpad into successful user experience in a product or service. But there are differences in the workflow that can seem like a big switch.

The UX design process doesn’t have a single ideation phase. Instead, there is an iterative problem-solving process. Typically, the design process is linear in graphic design. The ideation phase occurs at the start and serves as a blueprint for the final design. In UX design, using a design process that is user-centric calls for reiterations of the design at several steps: before ideation, user research is conducted, analysis occurs to identify design opportunities, a design is conceptualized, the design is implemented during prototyping, and lastly, users evaluate and test the design during the validation phase.

Essentially, UX design is involved at every stage of user interaction, not just the ones you can see. From research to wireframing, UX design creates the building blocks for great user experience and assembles them too. Graphic designers innately use human-centered design, but UX design takes the concept one step further with critical problem solving. What does the user need? What is something they want but aren’t getting out of the product? How can we do this better?

UX enables designers to identify what creates a positive experience and what creates a negative experience for users. It allows us to anticipate users’ needs and give them what they want without having to ask for it. UX design is the never-ending process of creating a meaningful user journey that helps them commit to a product or service.

As the design industry continues to evolve, one thing stays constant: we’re all about keeping end users at the center of everything we create.

Instagram Video Options

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Video has become a more important tool for brands over the last few years as a fresh and exciting way to break up the never-ending monotonous scroll, but in our current marketing climate, video has really solidified its place as an indispensable part of every marketing plan.

A great way to incorporate video to your current social feeds is to use it to teach followers something about your business. Creating a video to tell an interesting story about your business or how some of your products work is a lot more attention-grabbing rather than writing a long caption for a photo.

“Essentially, you’re trying to explain a lot of detailed information in a few seconds. But when you do it well, you see higher engagement and build a better rapport with your audience.” – Sprout Social

Today we’re going to focus on Instagram as a video platform and discuss what options are available.

Instagram “stories” allow for unique creative designs by incorporating polls, questions, gifs, doodles, and music. They are a great way to engage with your audience, but will only stay visible for 24 hours and then disappear. You can save the story’s content for the everyone to see publicly after this time period by “highlighting” it on your profile, though you won’t be able to see who has engaged with it after the initial 24-hour post is complete.

You can also “go live” on Instagram (similar to facebook live video), and create a real-time video for your audience to watch. You will be able to see how many people are actively watching it and who is commenting. It’s a great opportunity when you want to be your most authentic self and tell your viewers, “Here I am. This is what I do.” We don’t recommend using a script for a live video (though a rough outline can be helpful if you want to steer the conversation) – it’s more effective as a tool to interact with your follower base in the moment.

If you want your video to have even more staying power, you can post a pre-recorded 60-second video into your feed just as you normally would post an image file (though different social media schedulers have different requirements with regard to video file types, but if you’re posting it directly from your phone, the process should be seamless). By posting pre-recorded video into your feed you really have full control over your messaging and can invest more time planning it out. Also worth noting: in this type of post, everyone will see who and how many followers have liked or commented on your video vs. a video story, where user engagement data is visible to only you, the poster.

And finally, here are some great tips for creating Instagram video ads to keep handy for your next content-planning session: 5 Instagram Video Ads Tips to Wow Your Audience

Ten Years.

June 30, 2010 was the last day I was gainfully employed full-time.

July 1, 2010 marked day one of me doubling-down on whether I could sustain my growing freelance design side-hustle as a full-time business and work from home to have more creative freedom (and more freedom in general). I wanted to be more accessible to my children, who were at the time 11 and almost 15. I was walking away from the coveted title of Art Director at a weekly publication, and a very decent salary for someone in their 20s (my children are adopted if you’re trying to do the math; and when you start out with half-grown kids, you have even less time with them and they just literally grow up overnight 😭😭😭).

Anyone who’s ever started a business or gone out on their own knows the special brand of fear that only we have felt. And let me tell you, there is not a special measure to let you know you’ve “made it” or a guarantee that everything is going to be OK… ever. Even though the yardstick keeps moving, ten years feels like a huge milestone worth acknowledging.

It’s very satisfying to know I’ve garnered up every penny of my salary, ALL the taxes I pay, and my savings out of thin air for ten whole years, without any magical matching dollars or the security that comes with knowing a certain sum will be direct-deposited into my bank account every two weeks. When you’re self-employed, no one tells you when you’re due for a raise or a bonus (ha!), you just keep your head down, work hard, and keep showing up every day.

It feels like I’ve worked at least a tiny bit through just about every vacation – taking calls from the printer while standing on Alcatraz island, sending emails from the beach, and sneaking out of our hotel room to get a signal at Big Bend National Park just to check in and make sure everything is OK. I’ve even sent orders to print from a moving vehicle using my laptop and my phone’s hotspot (something that wouldn’t even have been possible for me ten years ago). As business owners know: you can never 100% “turn it off,” walk away, or “leave it at the office.” I’ve worked hard to put boundaries in place that work for me, and over ten years I’ve fully transitioned to B2B-only business (which makes boundaries a lot easier).

It takes a special kind of person to own a business, and that’s why we love working with other business owners and independent businesses. We get you. You’re our people.

I’m eternally grateful to EVERYONE who has thrown business our way over the last decade, from the very beginning, all the way to our current clients, both large and small, and every wild and creative project in between.

I love this business, I love this crazy independent life with all its highs and lows, and I hope to continue serving you
for MANY years to come.

THANK YOU.