Yes please, this was so helpful and insightful as a new aspiring UX Designer. If it does become more frequent, maybe make it into a series and playlist? Once a month? Every other month? Every quarter? Either way great video! Would love to see and learn more!
This is the typical kind of video that interest me to step up from Junior UX Designer to Expert ! I would like to see other videos like this to see your process with other projet 😄 (Im French from france I did my best in this comment 😆)
Totally agree with your comment @Dynastyy! Thank you @malewicz for this video, your experience help me a lot, was so clear, so interesting.... I loved it! (I'm Colombian, and I speak Spanish so I did my best in this comment as well 😅✌🏼)
This video is surely one of my favourites on your channel right now, and I'm excited for more videos like this one. I'll surely come back to them and re-watch them like crazy. Anyway, as I said in the Slack community, you brought the design to the next level. The truth is that it's not difficult to create a simple landing page, there are many examples you can follow or get inspired from, BUT for the Elevato landing page, you can see how detailed and well-thought-out it is, how it resonates with the target users and how many interesting elements it has; my favourite ones include the elements that pop-up and float and the hexagonal shapes. They create depth and make the website stand out, so it's not simply just another landing page, but something more.
Thanks! That definitely is something I plan on doing, but also very soon I'll be back to that non-design content that I believe is also important. Going for a healthy mix of both with the channel ;)
Very informative and engaging. I have seen a lot of videos from a lot of channels but they rarely provide so clear and detailed info. That's a real help to junior designers.
This is the sixth time in the month I'm watching this video taking notes of your process, changes and the design itself.. And everytime I learn new things from the same video.. It's so fascinating! Can we have more BTS videos? Cz this is one of the most valuable teachings I've been learning here!
I have watch tons of such this video about UX/UI process and more , but this one is something different...really enjoyable and fun to watch! nice work!
@@MalewiczHype The videos like this will definitely help the clients in getting more views on their site as well and who knows their next customer as well. 😃 Your videos would definitely help us designers in logical reasoning as to why certain sections are designed or structured in a particular way.
Really like these kind of behind the scenes videos. As a junior designer, this helps so much in streamlining my own process, and I would love to see more videos like this one.
Definitely gonna come back to this video time after time, when my UX journey begins :)) taught a lot of things, which hardly is done by most of the channels :)
We have the privilege of being in the industry for a loooong time with around 500 projects, so I can (and will) share how we do that whole UX process thingie ;)
I could be doing one a week for years, but not all customers are so open and cool like those guys, so we're in the talks with some of them right now about future videos - there will be one at least once a month :)
That's true, they were awesome! We're trying to "fire" bad clients early on when we see that they won't "let us" do a good job with their pushing. It's a very important part of both doing a good job and also not going crazy ;)
@@MalewiczHype Awesome! Product Designers are so difficult to come by, and with the plethora of companies scrambling to improve the UX of their products, we product designers have the advantage of saying no to bad clients. It's a bit of a golden era for this branch of design.
Great content, I like how clear the design is presented. Also a big thank you for highlighting the fact that front end development is not just about coding. It’s a very creative process where you constantly make design decisions to make the design work for the users.
That is true! Our devs have a designer mindset and they actually like experimenting with animations and transitions - with great results. But someone has to be open to "do a bit more" to be like that and not follow the "it displays on the screen so my job here is done" path ;)
Being given carte blanche on a project is one of the best situations ever! Like a dork, I personally love reviewing video recordings and heat map data to learn how users are "actually navigating" a site. For large sites with a lot of entry points it can be a little overwhelming. It'd be great to see you do a video on how to deconstruct that data, what changes to make and what to do with the material that is not performing well - is it relocated and monitored or just removed? While I love your design-focused teachings, tackling the business side of the marketplace and it's dynamics is a huge + . One of my favorite things about your material is that you cut the fat off unnecessary processes. Can't wait for more and thanks for this process review :) 👍
Thank you! Sadly, those in-depth reviews of heatmaps fall into a category that is usually strictly under NDA's because it's these changes that give the company an advantage over the competition, so chances of sharing something like this are slim. I may have to just create some small website myself, test on it and show the results ;)
I'm working on a website redesign for a company I work for and this information is almost invaluable! My re-design process will be much more thorough now!
I really enjoyed this video and I love the way you present it. It's delightful to look at. I also have learned lots of techniques that I had never used earlier. Thank you very much for your explanation using this video. I hope you will do more videos like this to help many UI/UX designers
@@MalewiczHype I don’t think I have any negatives really. But I really liked where you you showed the before and after while describing why you made the ch ages you did. I liked that you broke it down step by step. The little notes here or there about if that’s typical of a client or not are super helpful as well. I often find myself wondering in my bootcamp how necessary some steps are. Great info as always. 👍🏽
Indeed great use case here. Please continue to share. Would be great if you have different other verticals and you group these videos under a dedicated playlist in your channel. Keep up the great work.
Hello, this is a really nice video, thanks. It will help me structure my current design projects and increase my motivation to go deeper on my process. Thanks again!
Hey, in many cases there are NDA's and other secret agreements that prevent us from really showing the ENTIRE process of a client project - we can only scratch the surface but I hope it's still insightful. We may share more "full" case studies of some of our own projects that are in the works right now - we'll see how it goes.
Such a great explanation as to how you went about choosing what to focus on and your process. Oftentimes we get trapped into creating an artifact that's not necessary, ie .designing a persona; I enjoyed your explanation surrounding why that wasn't done here.
Watching you for the first time, nice work....I actually purchased your courses (after this video) even though I found a free pdf online, I didn't feel it was right to not pay you for your hard work, looking forward to more updates from you.
Thank you for the support! :) However, our courses don't work with those online PDF's and the books are usually very old versions, before most of the exciting updates so you'll definitely have more content because of this :)
Amazing Michal, it was a great brief explanation of the overall case study you and your team prepared for elevato. I am wondering why I missed this video of yours since it is from the year 2021. That landing page is really paying off from the efforts it took. Please also share about what grid settings you kept for this web design in terms of column size, gap, and container. Many thanks!
That's amazing, I love the whole content, and also the live website is amazing, we can learn more in-depth from such types of videos, keep rocking man ;)
Another fantastic showdown on this playlist - one thing I would say though, be careful of "tweaking" too much, sometimes it just slows the website/app - so annoying how many apps I ended up uninstalling/websites avoid visiting as they became clunky & slow to load. But it seems like your company gets the right balance
I'd be curious to learn more about how you went about the new logo proposal. For example, when did you bring your thoughts about the disconnect to the client. Did you get them onboard before dedicating the time to developing a new one? What would be the best way to move forward if the client says they're not in love with the idea of changing the logo but they SEEM open to it (without exactly saying they are). Do you ever start working on concepts when you're in a position like this, and what's the conversation like when you're ready to present this "surprise."
Thank you so much for this informative video! Can I ask how you guys did user testing or what tools you guys used? Going more in depth with your UX research process would be helpful!
I plan to talk more about that in the future - in some cases, especially with client projects we can't reveal some of the research because of NDA's and company policies. But I'll share it whenever I can :)
This is a great content. This kind of content is really helpfull to UX designers like me who are just staring in their studies. It puts the content I'm just learning into a practical, realistic approach and gives out a good idea of how the market actually works. Thanks, Malewicz! Your channel has been of great incentive.
What kind of platform are these webs built on after you handle the design specs to the developer? Do the clients ask for an admin platform so they can change info through time? Does that "admin platform" is unique to every client? or is the code developed using a known platform as background? I currently build websites with Wordpress + Elementor and have managed to create fairly complex and professional websites because of the research behind the project and the quality of the process of creating an information architecture, wireframe and prototype. But I do everything thinking of what's possible inside wordpress and even with some lines of code if needed. In these big kind of projects you work I can imagine you often desgin certain things that require to be coded from scratch, but what about the backend? what do you handle the client at the end? It would be great if you could share that part of the process one day in a video. Thank you!! Great content!
We don't use wordpress. For most of the projects we do (due to their scope and complexity) they're done completely from scratch (backend too - in nextjs mostly). For simpler ones like this one either the client has their own backend, or we do something like Storyblok headless.
This video really pushed me to decide to learn how to code, it’s very sad when you create a clean design and the front end transforms it too a mediocre product, but honestly I thought it that this happened because I worked with developers that aren’t very skilled, it never passed to my mind that big designers like you would have the same problem. Do you have any advise about how to start the journey of becoming a good front end? Considering that I’m a designer that haven’t had much contact with code until now it would be amazing to listen to that process. Thanks for the video, I loved it
If you already know a bit of design, you can start by learning CSS, as it's a good pathway to real coding. The main issue isn't of course the code itself, but rather the attention to detail and understanding what you're looking at - most frontend devs are lacking that - they simply "display stuff on the screen" and don't care it doesn't look 100% like the design. A combo of UI designer + Frontend Developer is a true unicorn and very valuable in the maret 😎
As a Designer you should also learn how the web is working. Talkt with the developer before you make your design if you are not sure how it works. aligment and spacing isn't always possible like in your figma file
Thanks mate, a really helpful video, i am also trying to create a startup where me and my team are designing and coding the website. I would really like if you can upload these kind of videos, with the things behind the scene 👍
This is super helpfull! I am starting to work on a project for a start up and as junior designer and somehow I felt that I need to start the process with broad research, interviews, personas etc. even if it doesn't seem to make much sense in that case. Your video inspired me to try lean process insted of design thinking
With redesigns it's often about the quick fixes (I have a video on that planned for next week - the approach in more detail). Once the quick/obvious fixes are in you can then start asking users for feedback, without those issues interfering with that feedback - it's great :)
@@MalewiczHype Oh I see! Looking forward to more exciting content from you man. I would love to see a video on Dashboard UI best practices the Hype4 way 😉
Please make this " Real Client Projects" more frequent💯✌🏻
Yes please, this was so helpful and insightful as a new aspiring UX Designer.
If it does become more frequent, maybe make it into a series and playlist? Once a month? Every other month? Every quarter? Either way great video! Would love to see and learn more!
This is the typical kind of video that interest me to step up from Junior UX Designer to Expert ! I would like to see other videos like this to see your process with other projet 😄 (Im French from france I did my best in this comment 😆)
The comment was great, thank you. I will try to create more of these :)
Totally agree with your comment @Dynastyy! Thank you @malewicz for this video, your experience help me a lot, was so clear, so interesting.... I loved it! (I'm Colombian, and I speak Spanish so I did my best in this comment as well 😅✌🏼)
Awesome! I'm learning Spanish right now, so maybe at some point I'll do some events in Spanish too :)
This video is surely one of my favourites on your channel right now, and I'm excited for more videos like this one. I'll surely come back to them and re-watch them like crazy. Anyway, as I said in the Slack community, you brought the design to the next level. The truth is that it's not difficult to create a simple landing page, there are many examples you can follow or get inspired from, BUT for the Elevato landing page, you can see how detailed and well-thought-out it is, how it resonates with the target users and how many interesting elements it has; my favourite ones include the elements that pop-up and float and the hexagonal shapes. They create depth and make the website stand out, so it's not simply just another landing page, but something more.
Thanks! That definitely is something I plan on doing, but also very soon I'll be back to that non-design content that I believe is also important. Going for a healthy mix of both with the channel ;)
Yes yes!!! When a frontend developer understands design, the process is more engaging and less buggy. This video was wonderful.
Yes! Thank you!
Very informative and engaging. I have seen a lot of videos from a lot of channels but they rarely provide so clear and detailed info. That's a real help to junior designers.
Thank you, we have another one of those planned for February 14th :-)
This was a beautiful Revamp
Yes, please, more videos about real projects for real clients! Amazing work! Thanks for sharing!!! 👏
This is the sixth time in the month I'm watching this video taking notes of your process, changes and the design itself.. And everytime I learn new things from the same video.. It's so fascinating! Can we have more BTS videos? Cz this is one of the most valuable teachings I've been learning here!
There will be more of those in Mid-August once we premiere some of the recent client projects :)
I have watch tons of such this video about UX/UI process and more , but this one is something different...really enjoyable and fun to watch! nice work!
Glad you enjoyed it!
Thanks for sharing this in public. Great redesign and this video and case study also taught us how we can present our design as well.
Awesome, I'll try to do these more regularly then :)
Amazing!!! Love these behind the scenes videos as a way to understand the client process
I really loved the way you gave the process in a simplified manner. Loved the redesign of Elevato as well.. Looking forward for many such videos 😃
That's my goal, we'll see how many more clients will be open to this :)
@@MalewiczHype The videos like this will definitely help the clients in getting more views on their site as well and who knows their next customer as well. 😃
Your videos would definitely help us designers in logical reasoning as to why certain sections are designed or structured in a particular way.
Wood carved logo's are always the best! haha
True! That rustic feel is hard to beat!
please, more of this! learned A LOT!
That's the plan!
Really like these kind of behind the scenes videos. As a junior designer, this helps so much in streamlining my own process, and I would love to see more videos like this one.
I have a plan to do more, but they require a bit of convincing the clients to allow us to make a video :_)
Happy they're helpful.
love these entertaining comments of customers :D great video!
Glad you enjoyed!
This is incredible. Thank you for sharing this process. Please more of this.
There will be more this year - we secured a couple of permissions for clients to share :)
Thank you for another great lesson Michael.
My pleasure!
Definitely gonna come back to this video time after time, when my UX journey begins :)) taught a lot of things, which hardly is done by most of the channels :)
We have the privilege of being in the industry for a loooong time with around 500 projects, so I can (and will) share how we do that whole UX process thingie ;)
@@MalewiczHype we would be blessed even if we get to see 5 of them, broken down like this, in depth 🙂
I could be doing one a week for years, but not all customers are so open and cool like those guys, so we're in the talks with some of them right now about future videos - there will be one at least once a month :)
@@MalewiczHype sounds like a treat, so glad to be a part of the journey :)
That's the perfect kind of content. I would love to see more of it!
Saved this so I can come back and watch when I need to start my portfolio! Thanks again you’re the best!!
Any time! Glad it was helpful :)
Learned so much! Please keep it coming!
Already have another one planned for Feb 14th :-)
So happy to watch another great video made by you, Michal! Your channel is my favourite!
Thank you! Appreciate it! :)
What a dream client. I loved watching this. Thank you so much for sharing this with us.
That's true, they were awesome! We're trying to "fire" bad clients early on when we see that they won't "let us" do a good job with their pushing. It's a very important part of both doing a good job and also not going crazy ;)
@@MalewiczHype Awesome! Product Designers are so difficult to come by, and with the plethora of companies scrambling to improve the UX of their products, we product designers have the advantage of saying no to bad clients. It's a bit of a golden era for this branch of design.
Great Video. A holistic view of a project!
That was the plan, good to hear it wasn't boring :)
Loved the approach.
Thank you!
This is pure gold content
I'd say it's 33% gold and 67% copper ;)
Great content, I like how clear the design is presented. Also a big thank you for highlighting the fact that front end development is not just about coding. It’s a very creative process where you constantly make design decisions to make the design work for the users.
That is true! Our devs have a designer mindset and they actually like experimenting with animations and transitions - with great results. But someone has to be open to "do a bit more" to be like that and not follow the "it displays on the screen so my job here is done" path ;)
@@MalewiczHype lol
Yes please MORE OF THIS!!!!!!!!!
We have a couple more planned! :)
This was super clear and informative. Thanks for sharing.
Glad it was helpful!
Being given carte blanche on a project is one of the best situations ever!
Like a dork, I personally love reviewing video recordings and heat map data to learn how users are "actually navigating" a site. For large sites with a lot of entry points it can be a little overwhelming. It'd be great to see you do a video on how to deconstruct that data, what changes to make and what to do with the material that is not performing well - is it relocated and monitored or just removed?
While I love your design-focused teachings, tackling the business side of the marketplace and it's dynamics is a huge + . One of my favorite things about your material is that you cut the fat off unnecessary processes.
Can't wait for more and thanks for this process review :) 👍
Thank you! Sadly, those in-depth reviews of heatmaps fall into a category that is usually strictly under NDA's because it's these changes that give the company an advantage over the competition, so chances of sharing something like this are slim.
I may have to just create some small website myself, test on it and show the results ;)
I enjoyed watching this! Thanks for sharing. I’m looking forward to watching and learning more. 🙂
Already scheduled another premiere from this series, on another project - Monday February 7th :-)
This is pure gold! Im surprised you're giving all that for free
I give what I can for free, but I do have some stuff I charge for and it's been working great for me and those who purchased :)
Great work here I must confess. For us starting a career in Product Design.
You can do it! It's all moving some rectangles based on very simple research :)
Really useful information, very well structured!
Glad you liked it
I just looked at the live version - this is so aesthetic and well-designed. I love it, super inspiring
Thank you! I hope to be able to share more of those processes :)
This is the BEST video so far🤩🤩🤩🤩🥳
What was your favorite part? So I'll know what to focus on :)
@@MalewiczHype The approach you shared + the design tips on showcasing the logo & overall re-design, all the video is a great😇
Thank you! I'll try to think of more tips like that for the next one :)
Sick!!!! Please keep doing this videos!
Thanks Leonardo! Already have another one planned for February 14th 🙌
@@MalewiczHype I'll check it out for sure!
Great stuff! Both the site and vid
Much appreciated!
This content is gem, Michal! The video editing and overall fun level of this video is top notch. Thank you and looking forward to more of that!
Glad you enjoyed it! Talking to some of our clients to allow us to do similar videos soon :)
Thanks. Very helpful video.
Loved the video, keep up the great work. Would love to see more videos like this.
Thanks! We have one already in the works :)
Love the format
Awesome! :)
I'm working on a website redesign for a company I work for and this information is almost invaluable! My re-design process will be much more thorough now!
Glad to hear! I will be doing more of these videos, with the next one dropping mid-February.
This free knowledge is far better than buying udemy 20 hours course. Kudos
Thank you for the video! I liked it the most, Keep publishing such a great format of content!
Glad you liked it!
I really enjoyed this video and I love the way you present it. It's delightful to look at. I also have learned lots of techniques that I had never used earlier. Thank you very much for your explanation using this video. I hope you will do more videos like this to help many UI/UX designers
There will be some more of these this year :)
Great video for juniors! Really liking the look behind the curtain :-)
That's the goal, glad it worked :)
Thanks for this video, you help me so much.
Yes more of these videos please.. You're the best Michal! :)
Another one on Monday, already scheduled as a premier :-)
Great video. I really liked this format. Seeing the before and after and learning about the service provided. Very interesting
Which part was your favorite / least favorite? It could help me plan for the future :)
@@MalewiczHype I don’t think I have any negatives really. But I really liked where you you showed the before and after while describing why you made the ch ages you did. I liked that you broke it down step by step. The little notes here or there about if that’s typical of a client or not are super helpful as well.
I often find myself wondering in my bootcamp how necessary some steps are.
Great info as always. 👍🏽
Thank you for sharing this with us! 🥰
Awesome! Glad you liked it :)
Indeed great use case here. Please continue to share. Would be great if you have different other verticals and you group these videos under a dedicated playlist in your channel. Keep up the great work.
Hello, this is a really nice video, thanks. It will help me structure my current design projects and increase my motivation to go deeper on my process. Thanks again!
Great to hear!
This was a great walk through of real world design scenarios. Thanks for making it ,and yes, I would love to see more of these.
This is great! Would love to see more examples
Please make this more Malewicz. Loved your ux/ui tips. ❤
Great video! It's nice to see the whole picture and the end result.
Awesome! We're really happy with how the redesign went, so definitely fun to share :)
More Behind the Scenes please ☺
In the process of asking some of our customers for permission like that for a future video :)
Thanks for sharing your project & behind the sense with us. I will surely like to watch more videos related to this.
There are a couple more from these "client project behind the scenes" on this channel :)
@@MalewiczHype ow thanks, I'm gonna check that out
This was really cool to see! Would you consider making videos reviewing your subscribers UI designs?
I do those audit videos from time to time, I think I've done 11 or 12 now. May come back to that or maybe do a live with more than one :)
This is incredible, I now feel like a pro after watching this vis,
Great to hear!
very informative video, love it ❤️
Glad it was helpful!
Please do more videos like this
You are awesome malewicz! I love this! Very articulate thought process behind is beautiful and awesome website.
Thank you so much! That was exactly my goal :)
Thank you for sharing your process, hoping to watch more often this content. Clear and realistic! Greetings from Peru :)
Awesome! Thank you! There's one more video like this on the channel already and there will be one more (with a mobile app) in March.
Love this one!
Glad you like it!
I like to see the whole approach! Is a mix of design, copy, research and concersion rate optimization. Thanks
Hey, in many cases there are NDA's and other secret agreements that prevent us from really showing the ENTIRE process of a client project - we can only scratch the surface but I hope it's still insightful.
We may share more "full" case studies of some of our own projects that are in the works right now - we'll see how it goes.
Such a great explanation as to how you went about choosing what to focus on and your process. Oftentimes we get trapped into creating an artifact that's not necessary, ie .designing a persona; I enjoyed your explanation surrounding why that wasn't done here.
That is true, I think we used personas like 2 or 3 times in my 23 year career ;)
Michal, your videos are amazing!
Well, I hope they'll get to amazing some day, but for now I'm happy with good :)
Amazing! Thanks for the video!
Glad you liked it! Which of the examples was your favorite? So I'd know what to focus on in future vids
I really love your design style
Thanks Marco! I wasn't doing the design on this particular project myself though :)
Bardzo dużo wiedzy, dzięki!
PS. Zawsze patrzę co tam masz nowego na biurku i co się zmienia w otoczeniu ^^
;-) Za wiele sie na biurku nie zmienia, ale planuje trochę rzeczy
That was awesome 💯
Great video. Keep up the good work 👍🏻😊
Thank you! Will do!
This was really good to know and some use cases that you highlighted.
Which tool was used to draw out some conclusions to reiterate.
Excellent video! I really enjoyed this format and watching the before and after videos. Nice work!
Awesome, thank you! I wasn't sure about how long it was, but it was really necessary to talk about all those points :)
Watching you for the first time, nice work....I actually purchased your courses (after this video) even though I found a free pdf online, I didn't feel it was right to not pay you for your hard work, looking forward to more updates from you.
Thank you for the support! :) However, our courses don't work with those online PDF's and the books are usually very old versions, before most of the exciting updates so you'll definitely have more content because of this :)
Amazing Michal, it was a great brief explanation of the overall case study you and your team prepared for elevato. I am wondering why I missed this video of yours since it is from the year 2021. That landing page is really paying off from the efforts it took. Please also share about what grid settings you kept for this web design in terms of column size, gap, and container. Many thanks!
That's amazing, I love the whole content, and also the live website is amazing, we can learn more in-depth from such types of videos, keep rocking man ;)
More to come, I need to convince some of our clients to let us ;)
Please share link to the live website.. thank you
Another fantastic showdown on this playlist - one thing I would say though, be careful of "tweaking" too much, sometimes it just slows the website/app - so annoying how many apps I ended up uninstalling/websites avoid visiting as they became clunky & slow to load. But it seems like your company gets the right balance
That's what we're trying to do, our devs always look at the lighthouse score and speed tests too.
I'd be curious to learn more about how you went about the new logo proposal. For example, when did you bring your thoughts about the disconnect to the client. Did you get them onboard before dedicating the time to developing a new one? What would be the best way to move forward if the client says they're not in love with the idea of changing the logo but they SEEM open to it (without exactly saying they are). Do you ever start working on concepts when you're in a position like this, and what's the conversation like when you're ready to present this "surprise."
Thank you so much for this informative video! Can I ask how you guys did user testing or what tools you guys used? Going more in depth with your UX research process would be helpful!
I plan to talk more about that in the future - in some cases, especially with client projects we can't reveal some of the research because of NDA's and company policies. But I'll share it whenever I can :)
@@MalewiczHype Ya really waiting for that
Looking for more videos like this. Great effort though Thanks.
More to come!
I love this video!
Please do more such vedios i really want to see how you approach desktop dashboards and web apps
thank you , i am really learning a lot from you !!
Great to hear!
We rarely do dashboards because I believe they're not the best way to show data - for most companies they're not needed :)
wanna see more like these in future
I'll try!
This is a great content. This kind of content is really helpfull to UX designers like me who are just staring in their studies. It puts the content I'm just learning into a practical, realistic approach and gives out a good idea of how the market actually works. Thanks, Malewicz! Your channel has been of great incentive.
Great to hear that :)
What kind of platform are these webs built on after you handle the design specs to the developer? Do the clients ask for an admin platform so they can change info through time? Does that "admin platform" is unique to every client? or is the code developed using a known platform as background? I currently build websites with Wordpress + Elementor and have managed to create fairly complex and professional websites because of the research behind the project and the quality of the process of creating an information architecture, wireframe and prototype. But I do everything thinking of what's possible inside wordpress and even with some lines of code if needed. In these big kind of projects you work I can imagine you often desgin certain things that require to be coded from scratch, but what about the backend? what do you handle the client at the end? It would be great if you could share that part of the process one day in a video. Thank you!! Great content!
We don't use wordpress. For most of the projects we do (due to their scope and complexity) they're done completely from scratch (backend too - in nextjs mostly). For simpler ones like this one either the client has their own backend, or we do something like Storyblok headless.
Thanks for sharing it. Nice project! 👏
Thank you, and double thank you for being one of the early subscribers and being here for over a year! Appreciate it a lot!
this is so pretty please show us more about the design behind the scenes
thanks alot
Thank you, I will try to convince another customer to be able to share one like that in February too :)
This video really pushed me to decide to learn how to code, it’s very sad when you create a clean design and the front end transforms it too a mediocre product, but honestly I thought it that this happened because I worked with developers that aren’t very skilled, it never passed to my mind that big designers like you would have the same problem. Do you have any advise about how to start the journey of becoming a good front end? Considering that I’m a designer that haven’t had much contact with code until now it would be amazing to listen to that process. Thanks for the video, I loved it
If you already know a bit of design, you can start by learning CSS, as it's a good pathway to real coding. The main issue isn't of course the code itself, but rather the attention to detail and understanding what you're looking at - most frontend devs are lacking that - they simply "display stuff on the screen" and don't care it doesn't look 100% like the design.
A combo of UI designer + Frontend Developer is a true unicorn and very valuable in the maret 😎
@@MalewiczHype niceeee thank you
As a Designer you should also learn how the web is working. Talkt with the developer before you make your design if you are not sure how it works. aligment and spacing isn't always possible like in your figma file
We collaborate with our developers very closely AND they also know design, so they understand optical alignment and can handle it well :)
I'm going to stay here a little longer, I'm currently learning both design and coding
Welcome! :-)
This was really helpful thank you
Awesome! :)
wow, smart process and great design! great work
Which parts of the process do you think I should focus more in future videos?
@@MalewiczHype I like explanations of your design decisions, it is all logical. I'd like to see more research in future vid :)
Thanks mate, a really helpful video, i am also trying to create a startup where me and my team are designing and coding the website. I would really like if you can upload these kind of videos, with the things behind the scene 👍
You mean a consultancy / agency startup ? That's something I recommend to most designers and developers, just do your own companies :) Good idea!
Świetny film, więcej takich :D
This is super helpfull! I am starting to work on a project for a start up and as junior designer and somehow I felt that I need to start the process with broad research, interviews, personas etc. even if it doesn't seem to make much sense in that case. Your video inspired me to try lean process insted of design thinking
With redesigns it's often about the quick fixes (I have a video on that planned for next week - the approach in more detail).
Once the quick/obvious fixes are in you can then start asking users for feedback, without those issues interfering with that feedback - it's great :)
wow this video is very useful for me. hope to see these kind of videos more often
More to come! Already working on a couple others :)
Loved it hopefully this can be in Designing UI's 2022 updated version
We cannot really put client projects in a book, but there will be some cool things in the 2022 update that I cannot yet talk about ;)
@@MalewiczHype Oh I see! Looking forward to more exciting content from you man. I would love to see a video on Dashboard UI best practices the Hype4 way 😉