This excllent How to Become a UX Designer course, you’ll learn what the relevant tools are for UX Designers as well as detailed guidance on building your career in UX Design. This UX Design course covers everything, from creating wireframes to using InVision building mockups, by the end of this course you’ll be on your way to earning double as a senior UX Designer. This UX Design course is taught by design expert Daniel Scott, who has years of experience to share with you. How to Become a UX Designer is for anyone who wants to take their design career to the next level. Find out how much UX designers can earn and what the responsibilities of a UX designer are. Learn how to run and report user testing, build user profiles and personas, and more with this solid set of resources.
Our learning material is available to students 24/7 anywhere in the world, so it’s extremely convenient. These intensive online courses are open to everyone, as long as you have an interest in the topic! We provide world-class learning led by IAP, so you can be assured that the material is high quality, accurate and up-to-date.
Daniel Scott is an expert designer and teacher. He is an Adobe® Certified Instructor for Photoshop, InDesign, Illustrator, Flash, Dreamweaver, Premiere Pro and After Effects. He prides himself on delivering the best service to his clients and making sure all his students learn to their fullest potential. He is currently the lead trainer at Bring Your Own Laptop Training Centre in New Zealand.
Those who successfully pass this course will be awarded a UX Design: How to Become a UX Designer certificate. Anyone eligible for certification will receive a free e-certificate, and printed certificate.
This excellent UX Design: How to Become a UX Designer will qualify you to be a UX Designer. As a UX Designer you could work for an existing organisation, or could work on a freelance basis. The average salary of a UX Designer in the UK is £31,193, and this will go up with experience (payscale.com). With this course you could fulfil any of the following roles:
1: Overview | |||
1. Introduction | |||
2: Understanding the industry | |||
1. 5 Phases for the UX designer | |||
2. UX can be broken into 3 fields | |||
3. UI vs UX | |||
4. How much can I get paid as a UX designer? | |||
5. How to get your first UX project | |||
3: Objectives | |||
1. Setting your objectives & goals | |||
4: Research | |||
1. UX Research introduction | |||
2. Competitor UX research | |||
3. UX Personas or user profiles | |||
4. Group exercise: Creating Personas | |||
5: Mockups | |||
1. UX feature list | |||
2. Group exercise: Pairwise comparison | |||
3. UX card sorts: Open & Closed | |||
4. UX wireframing tools | |||
5. Should you test your wireframes? | |||
6. Moodboards Inspiration | |||
7. Tips for building amazing UI/UX designs | |||
8. What tools can I use to build my UX mockup? | |||
6: Testing | |||
1. User testing tools: InVision | |||
2. Finding users for your UX testing | |||
3. Methods you can use to do a UX test | |||
4. More detailed UX testing: Ethnographic Eye tracking, Expert review & Diary Studies | |||
5. How many people do I need for my UX test? | |||
6. Reporting your UX findings | |||
7. Why this could be you last UX project – ever | |||
7: Building | |||
1. How should it actually be built? | |||
8: Conclusion | |||
1. Post project testing: A/B testing, search bars & live chat | |||
2. How to stay current in UX |
Great Learning Experience
I have thoroughly enjoyed the course taking it at my own pace, having the opportunity to research and learn, and expand on my own knowledge and experiences. I can now apply my learning into my job role.