Update: hey everyone! I created a detailed, step-by-step guide on taking the University of Michigan course: tinyurl.com/3h2t83w8 There is a post I made yesterday about this. If you have any questions about it or information you think should be included in the guide, please comment in that post. UA-cam isn't notifying me of a bunch of comments - I'm sorry if I haven't gotten back to you.
hello! thank you so much for such an in-depth guide. I was wondering if you think buying the course is worth the value over simply auditing it. would I be able to get the same benefits from simply auditing it, or would buying it be more extensive? thank you!
@@qi547 The only differences between auditing and not auditing is that you don’t get a certificate at the end and you won’t have your assignments peer reviewed. Personally, I didn’t even need to finish the whole course before I got my first job and the peer review was nice but I wouldn’t consider it wholly necessary. So, I would suggest auditing it.
I just wanted to say that the fact that you created such a thoughtful guide is very nice from you. You didn't have to after an already great video, but you took it even further. You even linked the specific articles to read and how to watch the courses for free step by step. That's amazing, thank you so much
I have been in the design (ux/ui/user reaserch/design thinking) world for 25+ years and I have been a hiring agent for over 10. I would absolutely hire you, or anyone who did all of this. I really hope more up-and-coming designers - or people thinking of getting into this industry see this. When you talk about the interview, I would also add it's more about your process than your portfolio - so, yes, own your shit! The best learning is all on the job, anyway. The hardest part is finding the balance of humility and confidence. to your point about being disuaded about the flooding of the market with talent; "there will never be enough designers to fix all of the design problems in the world." - not my quote, but its a good one.
I am also self taught visual designer/web designer .. one thing I don't get why even you ask lame question whats my design process? Why I even tell you my secret? Why you are so dumb to figure out that from my works if you are that expert ?
Man, I've spent *weeks* looking for a good primer on where to start but I feel like everyone is mostly concentrating on video quality, flashy intros and and that ish. This is the one I was looking for, straight to the point. Many thanks!
"Don't know it, OWN IT" is really great interview advice, especially the part about interviewers seeing right through you if you're not authentic. Thanks!
This video is the most authentic one I’ve ever watched. I can relate this to what my experience has been. I do not hold any degrees, I did enroll to a bootcamp but learned that it would not guarantee to get a job after finished. It took me half a year from hopefully getting a call from recruiter to completely owning the interview. The year after my first full UX designer working experience, I started to get more calls from recruiters who found me on LinkedIn. I then switched two jobs until I got my current job at my dream company. The journey is hard, with lots of ghosted applications, interview process and etc. However, I learned a lot thru thru the process and everything is worth it!
I really, really appreciate this , it clarified the road map for me because alot of other videos talk about UX but they make it more mysterious and hard to get. You really simplified in it and I appreciate it ! And happy new year to you !
One of the most helpful videos I’ve watched here in youtube about starting UX/UI. Very insightful and straight to the point! I graduated with a degree in Multimedia Arts last 2018 and been working as Video Editor and Motion Graphic Designer for years now. Planning to study UX/UI and this has helped and motivated me to start. Thank you so much. Subscribed!
Thank you! That’s the highest compliment I can get! I spent the better part of two years trying to see how I could get into UI/UX self taught, I watched so many videos, but they were all so vague or required to pay 10k for a bootcamp - it was super frustrating. I’m super happy I found a different way that works and I want others to be able to do the same. I hope you well on your journey! If you have any questions, let me know!
Out of the dozens of videos I have watched in regards to going from zero to hired, this is by far the best one. I resonated with practically your entire journey and the insights you have provided have given me more optimism. I am currently working on the Google UX/UI Design Coursera course and I'm going to start the two Coursera courses you recommended. I have 2 freelance projects that I am beginning next month and I really hope those projects will help boost my portfolio with "real-life" experience.
Thank you! The reason I made this video is because I was so frustrating by the lack of information in the other dozens of videos I watched. If there was a way, I wanted people to know it. Let me know how it goes!
Hii Mathew! Thanks for your comment and congrats for your upcoming projects🌟 Can I know how you managed to be currently taking the Google UX course and achieved to get clients? I would highly appreciate to hear your journey! I feel like I need to finish a course to be able to start working on a real project :/ Looking forward!
@@Ximenahegu They are small projects from my local community. I know a business owner that just opened a new restaurant and they wanted a website designed and the second project was someone who owns a small e-commerce store that never had a website only social media. Doing both projects for free since I'm very new and they are ok with that
Blaze I just want to thank you for this direct, no BS, straight in your face advice you give. I am in the research, fact finding and gathering phase of learning UX design and your advice really resonates with me. Thank you for sharing this roadmap with me.
Thank you very much for sharing your experience, I study ux ui from the scratch and it has taken me so long already as I have full time job from 9 to 6 and I have no one to ask for directions, your advices helped me a lot
I’m glad it was helpful! I also had a full-time job when I started learning and yeah, it takes a lot of time and sacrifice. But, you can do it! Take it at your pace, quality over quantity and you’ll get there!
Thank you so much for this informative and encouraging video. Out there, there are a lot of youtubers that pretend they are reviewing coursera certificates, but at the end people feel discouraged and as if they were wasting their time with the courses. Thank you for sharing your experience with us.
Hey Blaze!!! This was some amazing advice you have shared!! I am so happy for you getting that job even before you were done with your study!!! That's so bomb man!!!
This is so helpful! Thank you so much for sharing! I'm currently taking Google UX course on Coursera and it felt like I just flew through the first 5 courses and forgot immediately what I've learned. So I will go back and basically redo all the assignment with deeper understanding what I'm doing and why.
I'm glad it was helpful! The Google UX Certificate is on my list. It's a good course but if you feel you are missing some things after you finish it, I would recommend the U of M course I mentioned here; its very practical. Keep up the good work! You'll make it!
You had me at no degree and countless projects never finished ! MAKE MORE VIDEOS I WILL FOLLOW THROUGH! I had just finished Coursera Google UX certificate and I am even more self conscious that I ever was before. I feel like I'm paralyzed and drowning in imposter syndrome rivers.
Twinsies! I should be uploading another video very soon - I just need a solid three hours to polish it up. I will say this: if you were to explain the design process for one of your designs and it lines up with the UX method, you're no imposter - you're a designer!
And, I will say it feels weird to work alongside designers with Bachelor's and Master's degrees. But, I get high marks from them and my project leads so, I must be doing a few things right.
I appreciate your video. Thank you very much. I’d like to learn more about building up portfolios and what are the key things that should be shown in my portfolio as I’m learning and taking courses along.
Thank you! A video on portfolios will be coming up soon. It takes a little bit because I have been tapping some recruiters and hiring managers to get their feedback so it will be practical. But it’s on the list!
I'm currently enrolled in the Google UX Design Certificate course on Coursera, and they are going through all the different pieces of it (user/design/research/more), and you can build a portfolio with it, too. I'm not too far into the course yet, but it's also an option for someone looking to get into it.
Thank you! I’m glad to hear you say that. I was worried my real life experience would be too much fluff for the video but I wanted people to know that I actually did what I said and it worked. Thank you!
Great video! and thank you for sharing your experience. I am finishining up on my Coursera certificate and was looking to get into General Assembly next to lay out more of my foundation for my UX career. Hopefully the Job will come up afterwards!
Wow 👏 This is amazing, this is one of the best or even the best advice to listen to, before starting a career as a ui/ux. I started learning ui/ux few weeks back with the help of UA-cam videos. I need help from you on how to build a better portfolio and resumes as an upcoming in this ui/ux career. And can you also do a video explaining the difference and relation between UI and UX, because people always mixed them up. Thanks once again
Thank you so much! For your portfolio, I recommend having at least three items. They don't have to be full apps, just maybe a few screens, if that. But, make sure you've gone through the whole design process with each of them. This way you'll have triple the knowledge and experience and you'll be able to explain your design process during an interview. Your resume should be pretty simple (mine sure is). One good thing I learned is to list your accomplishments when explaining your past experience. I will put out some videos on these soon. Yes! I definitely will! And my next video will go into the difference between UI and UX a little bit. That should be coming out this week.
I am halfway of the video and I am feeling really motivated... You truly spoke my words... I am really struggling to find courses that really teaches the UX part
Very well explained, it was extremely helpful since I am thinking of starting my own journey but had no clue how to. Thank you for Sharing your knowledge. Amazing!
Same background story 15 years of Graphic Design and Desktop Publishing experienc, I have already took CALART course, now as you mentioned I will take the MECHIGAN course too, thanks. Hope your recommendation works, I was looking at other courses too but I go with this course.
It’s a great foundation for learning the UX side of it! And I will be releasing another video in the near future that will explain exactly what to do further.
Thank you for this insightful, detailed and straightforward video. I really appreciate this! The past month has been taxing and demoralising as I left my previous job (from an entirely different industry - life sceinces) to pursue UXUI design. Reading forums on the over-supply of entry level UX/UI designers in my country (Singapore) + globally and inability to get opportunities honestly left me questioning if I should even continue this path. I contemplated bootcamps and was initially thinking of internships in the meantime (but even those are hard to get for individuals like me without design exp/background...) But your advice gives me greater clarity and shows me that it can be done, as long as one is willing to put in the work and be resilient, eventually it'll be okay :") Thank you for sharing!
I’m so sorry for my late reply! I’m glad this was able to give you some inspiration. My goal is to release more videos this year that will be helpful, including one that goes into more depth of the process mentioned here. Also, I can’t speak for the entire global situation but in my latest livestream video where I am synthesizing data, in the last hour I talk about why there is a sense of overpopulation in the UX Design field and why I think that shouldn’t deter anyone. So that might be helpful too.
Honestly the best video on self learning journey I've watched here. Honest and to the point. Thank you! I am dropping out of a bootcamp because tok 💲💲💲and not getting value. Looking to continue by myself with the help of a mentor
So good. I would add to this, find an experienced UX mentor. Having the skill and experience with a coach giving feedback will definitely accelerate a player to the big league.
Hi, i just started the course of ui/ux specialization for free but the problem is they don't allow me to submit my assignments thay ask me to purchase , can i know the reason why
Hello! So, some courses that you can do for free won’t allow you to post assignments and therefore, you won’t receive a certificate at the end. I wouldn’t worry too much about it. The certificate isn’t going to help you very much and the feedback you’ll get from your peers may not be the most helpful at times. If you want feedback, you can have a friend look at the instructions for the assignment and then see if yours matches up.
Thank you so much for this video. Very informative and going to take the Michigan class! Appreciate your content and looking forward to following your advice!
Alots of thanks for helping to share a kind of helpful video like this. I'm a self taught currently a beginner but well familiar with design tool like figma. i have gotten to a point where i am clueless about what to further do, after studying and studying all over. Yet, im still unable to build a Portfolio for myself because i really dont know how to go about it. i would be glad if you consider been my mentor sir. Thank you!
Hey! I'm thinking of UX as a career path for me. I don't really have any background in something like this as I went to school for art in games. Was wondering if any recommendations have changed since you made this video? Also if you ever looked into the diploma course at the UX design institute which sorta fits in a weird category between bootcamp and college. Or if there are other fields one should dabble in to get a leg up in getting hired? Thanks for your time and thanks for sharing your experiences!
Hey! My recommendation is still the same with Coursera. But I will be coming out with a more detailed guide soon. If you have more specific questions, you can email me and I would be happy to point you in the right directions: AlwaysCallingMeBlaze@gmail.com
hi Blaze! I watched your UX-related videos multiple times, also subscribed! Really appreciate the insights you shared in your personal journey. I am personally also going through a similar path, though going through a bootcamp, I feel the need to put in more effort on my own especially when it comes to case studies and setting up my portfolio. I would love to connect with you if you have a moment to speak!
Found you on reddit. I'm in your shoes before getting your job. I did the Google UX design course. Do you recommend doing the University of Michigan course as well to increase my chances or would it be redundant?
Hello! Hm, so I haven’t personally done the Google UX course so I can’t speak from experience. But from what I have seen on they’re syllabi and some other designers I know, the Google UX course isn’t completely in-line with the UX Design Process. If you feel like you are missing something, then I would take the Michigan to feel the gaps of knowledge you feel you have. Or just start going through NNGroup articles since you are already acquainted with it.
Hello! I hope you well on the journey! Let me know if you have any questions! I am not super active on social media, but I have an Instagram by the same name that I am trying to build a little more: AlwaysCallingMeBlaze. I also have a Twitch that I stream almost everyday during my work day from 9a-4p EST just to chat with people between work and meetings. Same screen name.
Thanks so much for this video! I am looking at the two courses you mentioned and had already started with Google's UX design course. When I started the CalArts UX/UI course, it recommends taking the foundations to graphic design course they offer first- do you recommend that for someone without a background in graphic design?
USUALLY UI/UX designers don’t do a ton of graphic design. You will create designs for sure but they typically won’t look “pretty”. Mostly, you’ll want to get to know how to use the software and design principles as it pertains to UX. I personally didn’t take it and I haven’t had any issues in my work. I don’t think it’s needed.
Well done, that hard work paid off in the end! I'm guessing learning user experience design first is similar to learning the fundamentals of computer science BEFORE programming languages to become a software engineer
Did the job you applied to require some experience? I'm trying to apply for entry level roles but all require at least 2-5 year experience in the professional ux role. Do I apply anyways? thanks btw, this is helpful.
I don’t recall if they specifically asked for experience but they did want someone with a Bachelor’s degree (which I don’t have). I would apply anyway - the worst that can happen is they say no.
Hi, thanks for the video. I appreciate you. Why did you recommend these two instead of Google UX Design Professional Certificate and Foundations of User Experience (UX) Design in Coursera?
Hello! So, I haven’t taken the Google UX myself. But I have gone through and looked through the syllabus, assignments, etc. It’s not bad but it’s not completely accurate to the design process/method that UX follows. It lacks in some areas and the order of some of the steps may not give you the solid user based data you need. At least in my opinion.
Hi great video, very helpfull! What do you think about the Google UX Design coursera course? I am currently doint this one and I think it is very complete.
I haven't taken the Google course but I did read through the syllabus. In my opinion, it looks like a decent intro to UX, but I am a little worried by how certain topics are laid out. It doesn't really line up - at least, to me - with what a UI/UX designer might do on a day to day. I like the Michigan course better. But, I could be wrong!
I found you on Reddit! Unfortunately I tried to message you but I couldn’t find you anymore 😂 I was in the middle of the Google UX program but opted out for the Michigan + Cal you mentioned. I would like to know when making your portfolio, where did you go for that? Thank you!
Hey! Thank you for reaching out! I hope you’re enjoying the two courses. If you’re asking how to choose where to put your portfolio (to put it on display), I suggest choosing something simple like Dribbble. Or if you decide to create a personal website, make sure your portfolio “pieces” are on display. You want to make it easy for recruiters to see it. If you’re asking how to choose your projects for your portfolio, I suggest choosing three projects that you are passionate about, whatever that is. For example, I made an app for an electric vehicle. And so when I made it it didn’t feel like work, it was exciting and fun. And it cut down on my procrastination. I hope that answered your question correctly. Feel free to email me if you have any other questions: AlwaysCallingMeBlaze@gmail.com
@@alwayscallingmeblaze Mate, you have no idea how much this helps me. Bless you a ton! I’m a former kindergarten teacher and I just left my career. I had no idea UX/UI Design was a thing, but I’m definitely willing to try my best! You’ll certainly be receiving an email from me in the next few days! I really do appreciate this a ton, thank you!
@@dr.possible2399 I’m glad to hear it! I wanted a career change too. I was just tired of driving 45 minutes each way to work and I needed to make a decent living but I couldn’t afford college. UI/UX was/is a game changer for me! I get a good wage, I love my job and I’m always excited to start my day, and I get to spend more time at home and with my wife. It has been fantastic and I want others like me to achieve that same goal if it turns out right for them. I’m looking forward to hearing from you!
This video is unreal 🔥 super grateful for this road map blaze! Although I'm finding it hard to get this Coursera Financial Aid thing. What do I do or write to them to get these courses including the UX course from Google?
Yeah, I gotta make a video about that. So, when you’re looking at the course, you’ll see a link that says “Financial aid available”. Click on that and you’ll be asked to fill out some forms and you’ll get approval some days later. BUT, there is also the option to Audit the course - which means complete the course but without turning in assignments and you won’t receive a certificate. This is a good option in my opinion.
I would take both at the same time if you can. If not, I would say learn the software, spend maybe a month or two getting used to it, then do the University of Michigan course. I was also a beginner when I took the courses.
This is the most helpful video I’ve seen! Thank you for this! I’m about to start the Google certificate along with the courses you recommended. At what point would you recommend getting a mentor?
Thanks! I'm glad it was helpful! I would say as soon as possible! Finding guidance from someone who is in the place you want to be is always good to do sooner rather than later. I personally didn't have one when I started out. Then I started my job and now I have 3. I would also be happy to help you out in any way I can!
Love the video. I am currently taking the UX Research and Design Coursera that you recommended and the instructor for Course 1 is great so far. I came from the Google UX course after completing it and wanted to further extend my knowledge on the UX research side of things. My only complaint with this course (same with the Google UX course) is that the peer review system is terrible. People submitting fake assignments and copying other peers work hoping that others just grade it to give free handouts is an underlying issue in Coursera that isn't often talked a lot about in these courses. There were a few assignments I came across that showed dedicated work and authenticity, but the peer review system just isn't great when wanting real feedback.
Yes, I neglected to mention that. But I don’t think the peer review will matter much. You’ll be following an established design process so, there really isn’t much need for peer review. Although, I do recommend getting feedback on your designs regularly for several reasons, but you can ask friends or family or fellow designers. But when you’re starting out, you don’t need all that. You just need to know how to use the design process.
Hi, Blaze! Great video! Thanks for the ton of practical information you share, it's very generous of you. I'm curious to know what you think of the Google UX design course at Coursera.
Hello! I haven’t taken the course myself yet. I went through the videos and the curriculum though. In my opinion, it’s a decent intro to UX but it doesn’t really align with what the UX design process is. It more feels like Google’s procedure than the UX design process. Not terrible but I still like the Michigan course better.
Thank you for this video 🙏 I really needed it. I'm trying to get myself into UX/UI design but it's all very overwhelming and costs of some courses completely out of my reach. You gave me something to start with thank you so much ❤❤❤ please start also Instagram, you're great at mentoring!
I’m happy to could help! I do have an Instagram by the same name: AlwaysCallingMeBlaze. There isn’t much there right now: I working on a new video series here and I want to get that done before I focus heavily on other platforms. But I do check it everyday!
Thank you, this has been the most real useful help I have found. I am taking the google ux program at Coursera now, do you know how it compares to the two you took? I am stuck right now with the wireframing and prototyping, I don't feel the course has given enough direction. I think I will try the the two you took before I throw in the towel. What are the jobs one may start out with and what kind of pay? I really want to make a change, but I worry about starting over at my age my not pay off. Money is not everything, but it is the only thing that pays for having a life.
Hello! I’m glad it has been helpful! I haven’t taken the Google UX course yet but I have read the syllabus and looked through the lessons. I feel the Google course is a good and quick introduction but I feel it lacks in providing a proper explanation for the design process and how you need to THINK to do your job. The Michigan course teaches you the mindset of a designer and how you’d need to do your job. And when I got my first job, I had no issue with knowing what to do. That’s why I can recommend and Michigan course. Entry level UI/UX designer positions are readily available. My first one asked for 3 years of experience and a Bachelor’s - neither of which do I have. But they hired me because they said I could explain my process and what and why I do things well. Salaries are going to vary by location. But I think you could expect 70-90k for your first job, if you apply yourself and design process well.
It will vary - some assignments take a little bit longer than others. But, I spent probably 1-2 hours a day. And at the same time, do it at your pace. It’s all about how well you apply what you learn. So, take the time you need to!
I haven’t taken the Google UX course personally. But I looked through their syllabus and their lessons. I still think the Michigan course is the better option. It’s more in line with what a UI/UX Designer does; the Google course gives me the impression that they’re showing you how THEY do things - and it’s a little backward. In my opinion.
Hey there, I found your video from Reddit. Do you recommend taking the Google certification courses? Or should I just take the courses you recommended? I’m looking to pivot into UX/UI design.
Hello! In my opinion, I prefer the courses I recommended over the Google UX course. The Michigan course follows the UX design method while the Google course seems to follow their own “flavor” if you will. I haven’t taken the Google course but I have read through their lessons and I still prefer the Michigan course.
@@alwayscallingmeblaze thanks for the prompt reply. I will go with your recommendations. Very impressive you got to where you are without a degree. I have a BA in psychology but these days a degree does not mean much anymore so hopefully I can make the jump to ux/ui from where I am now.
@@popcornchicken5552 I think your background in psychology will serve you very well. Most of the job (it should be, at least) is being able to advocate for users and to be able to think how they think so you can design for them. And the rest of it is technology stuff. I give all of the credit to the success I found from the Michigan course. I spent a year trying to learn from UA-cam videos and didn't feel any more confident. And once I took their course, everything made sense. In my opinion and continued experience now as an actual UI/UX Designer, they teach the real deal.
@@alwayscallingmeblaze thank you! This one video has changed my outlook on the industry because I was always told that it was difficult to break into without some sort of computer science degree. But you proved that with a bit of work it’s possible, with or without a degree.
How long did you familiarize yourself with Adobe XD/Figma until you felt you were ready to take on the Coursera specializations? Thanks in advance. Edit, NVM just saw your FAQ video! (1 month)
I can only speak from my own experience. But I am currently working from home 95% of the time. And I am allowed to work from anywhere in the country. So, I think it gives a very good shot!
This sounds like me minus months and the job. I’ve never been more encouraged to pursue a new avenue than UI/UX. It tickles my tech, artsy and data interests.
I love techy-artistic stuff, but I have never been artistically talented. I can't draw to save my life and I can't do colors at all. But the science/psychology side of UI/UX does that for me - and its just awesome to do!
i never did anything in graphic designing..can i still go through this course and learn everything or do i need to learn something before starting this course
I would recommend learning the software first before jumping into Coursera. You’ll learn some UI principles and stuff when you’re doing that. And then the CalArts course can help refine some of that. You don’t need to become a fancy graphic designer at all! But it does help when you can make visual designs.
Did you started learning both coursera simultaneously or not? I'm in the process of learning the software side, Figma to be exact, and just want to start one of the two, cause I don't have enough time right now for both. Just wanna say that your video changed my view on this subject as I'm trying to change my career and UX UI is something I really want to do and I'm highly motivated after this.
Hello! Yes, I did both at once. The CALARTS course is pretty simple compared to the Michigan course. But if you can only do one, do the Michigan course.
man one question, I'm finishing my formation in UI/UX, and I'm preparing myself to make a few projects and adding to my portfolio, I have 31yo and I'm feeling a little old for this do you think I'm too old to land a job as a JR ux/ui designer?
Not at all! I’m 34 and I started my first job THIS YEAR. Even then, I never think it’s too late to start a new career. If I didn’t, I wouldn’t nearly be this happy! Go for it!
How much would you say age affects hiring for entry level UX design? Yes, no discrimination and all that, but I'm curious before I invest more time and effort and more importantly, getting more excited about this line of work. I've spent most of my career as a police dispatcher and police records specialist. I'm 52 now and I've been taking UX Coursera classes for 3 months. Thank you in advance for your honest response.
Hello! I currently work with three UX Designers that I would say are middle aged, two have families. Two transitioned to UI/UX from another tech something and one is entry level - pretty much brand new to it. And I believe I am either the second youngest or youngest among the designers. So, I don’t really see age being an issue especially with there being so many positions open and it still being a somewhat emerging field.
So basically if I want to start from scratch and want to start my career in UX/UI design which two courses will be the best for me? And from which platform I can access those which will be a bit easy for me and also affordable?
@@alwayscallingmeblaze UX is very broad but it's something I'd really like yo do. I've learnt quite a lot about it. My issue right now is to apply all the things I've learnt. Like, I'd like to work with someone who's currently working on something so I can learn first hand from that. That'll fasten my learning as well
@@eny_codes Gotcha. My upcoming video is exactly on that. But, it probably be out for a bit longer. The Michigan course is really practical and has you actually do the job of a UI/UX designer. It doesn’t just tell you what they do, it has you actually do it and shows you how. But I know exactly what you mean. Stay tuned, I think I will work harder to get that video done sooner. It will spell out every single step.
Update: hey everyone! I created a detailed, step-by-step guide on taking the University of Michigan course: tinyurl.com/3h2t83w8
There is a post I made yesterday about this. If you have any questions about it or information you think should be included in the guide, please comment in that post. UA-cam isn't notifying me of a bunch of comments - I'm sorry if I haven't gotten back to you.
hello! thank you so much for such an in-depth guide. I was wondering if you think buying the course is worth the value over simply auditing it. would I be able to get the same benefits from simply auditing it, or would buying it be more extensive? thank you!
@@qi547 The only differences between auditing and not auditing is that you don’t get a certificate at the end and you won’t have your assignments peer reviewed. Personally, I didn’t even need to finish the whole course before I got my first job and the peer review was nice but I wouldn’t consider it wholly necessary.
So, I would suggest auditing it.
I just wanted to say that the fact that you created such a thoughtful guide is very nice from you. You didn't have to after an already great video, but you took it even further. You even linked the specific articles to read and how to watch the courses for free step by step. That's amazing, thank you so much
@@venuskitten92 I’m glad it was helpful! I am working on some newer stuff but life and work is busy at the moment.
I have been in the design (ux/ui/user reaserch/design thinking) world for 25+ years and I have been a hiring agent for over 10. I would absolutely hire you, or anyone who did all of this. I really hope more up-and-coming designers - or people thinking of getting into this industry see this. When you talk about the interview, I would also add it's more about your process than your portfolio - so, yes, own your shit! The best learning is all on the job, anyway. The hardest part is finding the balance of humility and confidence.
to your point about being disuaded about the flooding of the market with talent; "there will never be enough designers to fix all of the design problems in the world." - not my quote, but its a good one.
Thank you for your input! Very valuable!
I am also self taught visual designer/web designer .. one thing I don't get why even you ask lame question whats my design process? Why I even tell you my secret? Why you are so dumb to figure out that from my works if you are that expert ?
Edit above: "There aren’t enough professional designers to address the number of design problems that we have." - Tim Kieschnick
I'm hoping to get recruited by you.
* then goes on to put 2 years experience necessary in the job description *
Thanks for not putting adds during the video, it felt like a you are a friend giving me advices.
Man, I've spent *weeks* looking for a good primer on where to start but I feel like everyone is mostly concentrating on video quality, flashy intros and and that ish. This is the one I was looking for, straight to the point. Many thanks!
I’m glad it was helpful!
"Don't know it, OWN IT" is really great interview advice, especially the part about interviewers seeing right through you if you're not authentic. Thanks!
This video is the most authentic one I’ve ever watched. I can relate this to what my experience has been.
I do not hold any degrees, I did enroll to a bootcamp but learned that it would not guarantee to get a job after finished. It took me half a year from hopefully getting a call from recruiter to completely owning the interview.
The year after my first full UX designer working experience, I started to get more calls from recruiters who found me on LinkedIn. I then switched two jobs until I got my current job at my dream company.
The journey is hard, with lots of ghosted applications, interview process and etc.
However, I learned a lot thru thru the process and everything is worth it!
Thank you for sharing! It’s a rough road, man. But, I’m happy it worked out for the both us! It’s an amazing career to be in!
I really, really appreciate this , it clarified the road map for me because alot of other videos talk about UX but they make it more mysterious and hard to get. You really simplified in it and I appreciate it ! And happy new year to you !
You’re very welcome! It’s the reason I made this video - I had the same results when I was trying to learn too. More to come!
Wham, no fluff, straight gold! Thanks for putting this out.
Thanks so much!
i have no idea why, but hearing your voice just makes feel soothed.
Awww thank you! I don’t like my own voice but I am guessing most people don’t either!
Very helpful ..seriously i'm also looking where to do ui/ ux and
This video kinda motivate me.
Thank you so much.
One of the most helpful videos I’ve watched here in youtube about starting UX/UI. Very insightful and straight to the point! I graduated with a degree in Multimedia Arts last 2018 and been working as Video Editor and Motion Graphic Designer for years now. Planning to study UX/UI and this has helped and motivated me to start. Thank you so much. Subscribed!
Thank you! That’s the highest compliment I can get!
I spent the better part of two years trying to see how I could get into UI/UX self taught, I watched so many videos, but they were all so vague or required to pay 10k for a bootcamp - it was super frustrating. I’m super happy I found a different way that works and I want others to be able to do the same.
I hope you well on your journey! If you have any questions, let me know!
Out of the dozens of videos I have watched in regards to going from zero to hired, this is by far the best one. I resonated with practically your entire journey and the insights you have provided have given me more optimism. I am currently working on the Google UX/UI Design Coursera course and I'm going to start the two Coursera courses you recommended.
I have 2 freelance projects that I am beginning next month and I really hope those projects will help boost my portfolio with "real-life" experience.
Thank you! The reason I made this video is because I was so frustrating by the lack of information in the other dozens of videos I watched. If there was a way, I wanted people to know it. Let me know how it goes!
Hii Mathew! Thanks for your comment and congrats for your upcoming projects🌟 Can I know how you managed to be currently taking the Google UX course and achieved to get clients? I would highly appreciate to hear your journey! I feel like I need to finish a course to be able to start working on a real project :/ Looking forward!
@@Ximenahegu They are small projects from my local community. I know a business owner that just opened a new restaurant and they wanted a website designed and the second project was someone who owns a small e-commerce store that never had a website only social media. Doing both projects for free since I'm very new and they are ok with that
@@matthewrichardson366 that sounds great, and very insightful to know how others are making their steps. Thanks a lot for your response Matthew!
Blaze I just want to thank you for this direct, no BS, straight in your face advice you give.
I am in the research, fact finding and gathering phase of learning UX design and your advice really resonates with me.
Thank you for sharing this roadmap with me.
You’re very welcome! I’m glad it was helpful! If you have any questions, just let me know!
Thank you very much for sharing your experience, I study ux ui from the scratch and it has taken me so long already as I have full time job from 9 to 6 and I have no one to ask for directions, your advices helped me a lot
I’m glad it was helpful! I also had a full-time job when I started learning and yeah, it takes a lot of time and sacrifice. But, you can do it! Take it at your pace, quality over quantity and you’ll get there!
Thank you very much, Sir!
Thank you so much for this informative and encouraging video. Out there, there are a lot of youtubers that pretend they are reviewing coursera certificates, but at the end people feel discouraged and as if they were wasting their time with the courses.
Thank you for sharing your experience with us.
Hey Blaze!!! This was some amazing advice you have shared!! I am so happy for you getting that job even before you were done with your study!!! That's so bomb man!!!
Thank you! I’m glad it helped!
Great video (Don't know it, OWN it)
This is so helpful! Thank you so much for sharing! I'm currently taking Google UX course on Coursera and it felt like I just flew through the first 5 courses and forgot immediately what I've learned. So I will go back and basically redo all the assignment with deeper understanding what I'm doing and why.
I'm glad it was helpful! The Google UX Certificate is on my list. It's a good course but if you feel you are missing some things after you finish it, I would recommend the U of M course I mentioned here; its very practical.
Keep up the good work! You'll make it!
You had me at no degree and countless projects never finished ! MAKE MORE VIDEOS I WILL FOLLOW THROUGH! I had just finished Coursera Google UX certificate and I am even more self conscious that I ever was before. I feel like I'm paralyzed and drowning in imposter syndrome rivers.
Twinsies!
I should be uploading another video very soon - I just need a solid three hours to polish it up.
I will say this: if you were to explain the design process for one of your designs and it lines up with the UX method, you're no imposter - you're a designer!
And, I will say it feels weird to work alongside designers with Bachelor's and Master's degrees. But, I get high marks from them and my project leads so, I must be doing a few things right.
@@alwayscallingmeblaze That's rad sir 🔥
Thanks for sharing man. really helpfull
I appreciate your video. Thank you very much. I’d like to learn more about building up portfolios and what are the key things that should be shown in my portfolio as I’m learning and taking courses along.
Thank you! A video on portfolios will be coming up soon. It takes a little bit because I have been tapping some recruiters and hiring managers to get their feedback so it will be practical. But it’s on the list!
Please share your portfolio. Thank you for sharing. It is excellent advice.
I'm currently enrolled in the Google UX Design Certificate course on Coursera, and they are going through all the different pieces of it (user/design/research/more), and you can build a portfolio with it, too. I'm not too far into the course yet, but it's also an option for someone looking to get into it.
Dude, I relate to those years of looking what to do long term. Your video is the best I ever watched about the subject. Thanks 🙏
I really like real life stories without any sponsors. Thank you so much for the roadmap.
Thank you! I’m glad to hear you say that. I was worried my real life experience would be too much fluff for the video but I wanted people to know that I actually did what I said and it worked. Thank you!
@@alwayscallingmeblaze I really appreciate that and I shared with some of my friends who really search a path to be designer.
Great video! and thank you for sharing your experience. I am finishining up on my Coursera certificate and was looking to get into General Assembly next to lay out more of my foundation for my UX career. Hopefully the Job will come up afterwards!
Awesome! Let me know how it goes!
Thanks bro that was really helpful
Great Video , Thanks for all the advices Man.
Happy to help! Let me know how it goes!
@@alwayscallingmeblaze yes sure
Great video!
Thank you so much for this video 👍
Thank you for this tutorial.
Wow 👏
This is amazing, this is one of the best or even the best advice to listen to, before starting a career as a ui/ux.
I started learning ui/ux few weeks back with the help of UA-cam videos.
I need help from you on how to build a better portfolio and resumes as an upcoming in this ui/ux career.
And can you also do a video explaining the difference and relation between UI and UX, because people always mixed them up.
Thanks once again
Thank you so much!
For your portfolio, I recommend having at least three items. They don't have to be full apps, just maybe a few screens, if that. But, make sure you've gone through the whole design process with each of them. This way you'll have triple the knowledge and experience and you'll be able to explain your design process during an interview.
Your resume should be pretty simple (mine sure is). One good thing I learned is to list your accomplishments when explaining your past experience.
I will put out some videos on these soon.
Yes! I definitely will! And my next video will go into the difference between UI and UX a little bit. That should be coming out this week.
Thank you ! You did a great job simplifying such a complex daw....Looking forward to be a great producer
Respect ♥
I appreciate you making this video sharing your experience of how you go through with it. 👍🏻
You’re welcome! I’m glad it helped! More to come!
I am halfway of the video and I am feeling really motivated... You truly spoke my words... I am really struggling to find courses that really teaches the UX part
I'm glad! I knew others had to be feeling the same way I did. Let me know how your journey goes!
Was facing some difficulty finding jobs and this video definitely helped. Thank you, Blaze
I’m glad it was helpful!
Thanks for the motivation! Just subscribed! Looking forward for more videos like these :)
Thank you!
Great video appreciate it
Very well explained, it was extremely helpful since I am thinking of starting my own journey but had no clue how to. Thank you for Sharing your knowledge. Amazing!
You're welcome! Let me know how it goes!
Same background story 15 years of Graphic Design and Desktop Publishing experienc, I have already took CALART course, now as you mentioned I will take the MECHIGAN course too, thanks. Hope your recommendation works, I was looking at other courses too but I go with this course.
It’s a great foundation for learning the UX side of it! And I will be releasing another video in the near future that will explain exactly what to do further.
Thank you for this insightful, detailed and straightforward video. I really appreciate this!
The past month has been taxing and demoralising as I left my previous job (from an entirely different industry - life sceinces) to pursue UXUI design. Reading forums on the over-supply of entry level UX/UI designers in my country (Singapore) + globally and inability to get opportunities honestly left me questioning if I should even continue this path. I contemplated bootcamps and was initially thinking of internships in the meantime (but even those are hard to get for individuals like me without design exp/background...)
But your advice gives me greater clarity and shows me that it can be done, as long as one is willing to put in the work and be resilient, eventually it'll be okay :") Thank you for sharing!
I’m so sorry for my late reply! I’m glad this was able to give you some inspiration.
My goal is to release more videos this year that will be helpful, including one that goes into more depth of the process mentioned here.
Also, I can’t speak for the entire global situation but in my latest livestream video where I am synthesizing data, in the last hour I talk about why there is a sense of overpopulation in the UX Design field and why I think that shouldn’t deter anyone. So that might be helpful too.
Wow. Thank you! Truly, thank you so much for sharing your background story, experience, and very useful knowledge/tips with us.
You are so welcome!
Great advice man! Thanks
Anytime! Let me know how it goes!
Great, thorough video! Thanks for sharing this.
Honestly the best video on self learning journey I've watched here. Honest and to the point. Thank you! I am dropping out of a bootcamp because tok 💲💲💲and not getting value. Looking to continue by myself with the help of a mentor
I am glad it was helpful! Let me know how I can help!
This is great! Thank you so much for sharing! 😊
So good. I would add to this, find an experienced UX mentor. Having the skill and experience with a coach giving feedback will definitely accelerate a player to the big league.
Yes, a mentor would be EXTREMELY helpful!
Awesome video. Thank you for making this. You give off a very honest vibe.
Thank you! It’s my intention to be as practical and honest as possible!
Hi, i just started the course of ui/ux specialization for free but the problem is they don't allow me to submit my assignments thay ask me to purchase , can i know the reason why
Hello! So, some courses that you can do for free won’t allow you to post assignments and therefore, you won’t receive a certificate at the end.
I wouldn’t worry too much about it. The certificate isn’t going to help you very much and the feedback you’ll get from your peers may not be the most helpful at times.
If you want feedback, you can have a friend look at the instructions for the assignment and then see if yours matches up.
This was extremely helpful. Liked and Subscribed! Thanks!
Thank you!
Thank you so much for this video. Very informative and going to take the Michigan class! Appreciate your content and looking forward to following your advice!
This is helpful 👍🏼 thanks mate
Alots of thanks for helping to share a kind of helpful video like this. I'm a self taught currently a beginner but well familiar with design tool like figma. i have gotten to a point where i am clueless about what to further do, after studying and studying all over. Yet, im still unable to build a Portfolio for myself because i really dont know how to go about it. i would be glad if you consider been my mentor sir. Thank you!
Hello! I would be happy to help in any way I can! The next video I am making will be about building a portfolio, so that should be helpful.
could you make a video doing a CV from the beggining to end? pleasee
Absolutely!
THANK YOU
You’re very welcome!
Hey! I'm thinking of UX as a career path for me. I don't really have any background in something like this as I went to school for art in games. Was wondering if any recommendations have changed since you made this video? Also if you ever looked into the diploma course at the UX design institute which sorta fits in a weird category between bootcamp and college. Or if there are other fields one should dabble in to get a leg up in getting hired? Thanks for your time and thanks for sharing your experiences!
Hey! My recommendation is still the same with Coursera. But I will be coming out with a more detailed guide soon. If you have more specific questions, you can email me and I would be happy to point you in the right directions: AlwaysCallingMeBlaze@gmail.com
hi Blaze! I watched your UX-related videos multiple times, also subscribed! Really appreciate the insights you shared in your personal journey. I am personally also going through a similar path, though going through a bootcamp, I feel the need to put in more effort on my own especially when it comes to case studies and setting up my portfolio. I would love to connect with you if you have a moment to speak!
Absolutely! Shoot me an email and we can get connected!
And my email is alwayscallingmeblaze@gmail.com
A video doing an overview of your experience with those two courses would be really cool. 🙏🏾
Thank you! That’s a great idea! I’ll add it to the list!
Found you on reddit. I'm in your shoes before getting your job. I did the Google UX design course. Do you recommend doing the University of Michigan course as well to increase my chances or would it be redundant?
Hello! Hm, so I haven’t personally done the Google UX course so I can’t speak from experience. But from what I have seen on they’re syllabi and some other designers I know, the Google UX course isn’t completely in-line with the UX Design Process.
If you feel like you are missing something, then I would take the Michigan to feel the gaps of knowledge you feel you have. Or just start going through NNGroup articles since you are already acquainted with it.
I'm new to UI/UX, trying to teach myself nd thanks blaze for the suggestions. can you drop your social media handles links .
Hello! I hope you well on the journey! Let me know if you have any questions!
I am not super active on social media, but I have an Instagram by the same name that I am trying to build a little more: AlwaysCallingMeBlaze.
I also have a Twitch that I stream almost everyday during my work day from 9a-4p EST just to chat with people between work and meetings. Same screen name.
Thanks so much for this video! I am looking at the two courses you mentioned and had already started with Google's UX design course. When I started the CalArts UX/UI course, it recommends taking the foundations to graphic design course they offer first- do you recommend that for someone without a background in graphic design?
USUALLY UI/UX designers don’t do a ton of graphic design. You will create designs for sure but they typically won’t look “pretty”.
Mostly, you’ll want to get to know how to use the software and design principles as it pertains to UX.
I personally didn’t take it and I haven’t had any issues in my work. I don’t think it’s needed.
thanks so much!
Awesome video! Really appreciate it
Thank you! I'm glad it was helpful!
Thanks 🙏
I really appreciate it
Well done, that hard work paid off in the end! I'm guessing learning user experience design first is similar to learning the fundamentals of computer science BEFORE programming languages to become a software engineer
That’s a very good analogy!
Thank you so much , I loved your explanation . It was really encouraging.
I’m glad it was helpful!
Thank you so much, I truly needed to hear this today.
I’m glad it was helpful!
TNice tutorials just made it so clear to thank you so much
Thank you! I try!
Did the job you applied to require some experience? I'm trying to apply for entry level roles but all require at least 2-5 year experience in the professional ux role. Do I apply anyways? thanks btw, this is helpful.
I don’t recall if they specifically asked for experience but they did want someone with a Bachelor’s degree (which I don’t have). I would apply anyway - the worst that can happen is they say no.
This video is so so neat and well done
Will do!
Hi, thanks for the video. I appreciate you.
Why did you recommend these two instead of Google UX Design Professional Certificate and Foundations of User Experience (UX) Design in Coursera?
Hello! So, I haven’t taken the Google UX myself. But I have gone through and looked through the syllabus, assignments, etc.
It’s not bad but it’s not completely accurate to the design process/method that UX follows. It lacks in some areas and the order of some of the steps may not give you the solid user based data you need. At least in my opinion.
@@alwayscallingmeblaze Thanks for the quick response. :)
Great video! Also great advice to go for both coursera courses at once (in the comments). Thanks!
Thanks! If you decide to start this awesome journey and need any help, feel free to reach out to me!
Hi great video, very helpfull! What do you think about the Google UX Design coursera course? I am currently doint this one and I think it is very complete.
I haven't taken the Google course but I did read through the syllabus.
In my opinion, it looks like a decent intro to UX, but I am a little worried by how certain topics are laid out. It doesn't really line up - at least, to me - with what a UI/UX designer might do on a day to day. I like the Michigan course better.
But, I could be wrong!
This video was extremely helpful. Thank you so much!
Hi, may we see your portfolio that you presented during the interview?
Sure! I’ll create a video on that!
Great info 🙏🏾
Glad it was helpful!
I found you on Reddit! Unfortunately I tried to message you but I couldn’t find you anymore 😂
I was in the middle of the Google UX program but opted out for the Michigan + Cal you mentioned.
I would like to know when making your portfolio, where did you go for that?
Thank you!
Hey! Thank you for reaching out! I hope you’re enjoying the two courses.
If you’re asking how to choose where to put your portfolio (to put it on display), I suggest choosing something simple like Dribbble. Or if you decide to create a personal website, make sure your portfolio “pieces” are on display. You want to make it easy for recruiters to see it.
If you’re asking how to choose your projects for your portfolio, I suggest choosing three projects that you are passionate about, whatever that is. For example, I made an app for an electric vehicle. And so when I made it it didn’t feel like work, it was exciting and fun. And it cut down on my procrastination.
I hope that answered your question correctly. Feel free to email me if you have any other questions: AlwaysCallingMeBlaze@gmail.com
@@alwayscallingmeblaze Mate, you have no idea how much this helps me. Bless you a ton! I’m a former kindergarten teacher and I just left my career. I had no idea UX/UI Design was a thing, but I’m definitely willing to try my best! You’ll certainly be receiving an email from me in the next few days! I really do appreciate this a ton, thank you!
@@dr.possible2399 I’m glad to hear it! I wanted a career change too. I was just tired of driving 45 minutes each way to work and I needed to make a decent living but I couldn’t afford college. UI/UX was/is a game changer for me! I get a good wage, I love my job and I’m always excited to start my day, and I get to spend more time at home and with my wife. It has been fantastic and I want others like me to achieve that same goal if it turns out right for them.
I’m looking forward to hearing from you!
This video is unreal 🔥 super grateful for this road map blaze! Although I'm finding it hard to get this Coursera Financial Aid thing. What do I do or write to them to get these courses including the UX course from Google?
Yeah, I gotta make a video about that.
So, when you’re looking at the course, you’ll see a link that says “Financial aid available”. Click on that and you’ll be asked to fill out some forms and you’ll get approval some days later.
BUT, there is also the option to Audit the course - which means complete the course but without turning in assignments and you won’t receive a certificate. This is a good option in my opinion.
I have question which course should i take first if I'm just a beginner ???
I would take both at the same time if you can. If not, I would say learn the software, spend maybe a month or two getting used to it, then do the University of Michigan course.
I was also a beginner when I took the courses.
This is the most helpful video I’ve seen! Thank you for this! I’m about to start the Google certificate along with the courses you recommended. At what point would you recommend getting a mentor?
Thanks! I'm glad it was helpful!
I would say as soon as possible! Finding guidance from someone who is in the place you want to be is always good to do sooner rather than later.
I personally didn't have one when I started out. Then I started my job and now I have 3.
I would also be happy to help you out in any way I can!
Thank you !
You're welcome!
Love the video. I am currently taking the UX Research and Design Coursera that you recommended and the instructor for Course 1 is great so far. I came from the Google UX course after completing it and wanted to further extend my knowledge on the UX research side of things. My only complaint with this course (same with the Google UX course) is that the peer review system is terrible. People submitting fake assignments and copying other peers work hoping that others just grade it to give free handouts is an underlying issue in Coursera that isn't often talked a lot about in these courses. There were a few assignments I came across that showed dedicated work and authenticity, but the peer review system just isn't great when wanting real feedback.
Yes, I neglected to mention that. But I don’t think the peer review will matter much. You’ll be following an established design process so, there really isn’t much need for peer review. Although, I do recommend getting feedback on your designs regularly for several reasons, but you can ask friends or family or fellow designers. But when you’re starting out, you don’t need all that. You just need to know how to use the design process.
Hi, we’re you able to apply for financial aid?
@@monikakayy3662 Nah, I didn't apply for financial aid. I am currently on the one week free Coursera Plus trial.
Hi, Blaze!
Great video! Thanks for the ton of practical information you share, it's very generous of you. I'm curious to know what you think of the Google UX design course at Coursera.
Hello! I haven’t taken the course myself yet. I went through the videos and the curriculum though. In my opinion, it’s a decent intro to UX but it doesn’t really align with what the UX design process is. It more feels like Google’s procedure than the UX design process. Not terrible but I still like the Michigan course better.
Thank you for this video 🙏 I really needed it. I'm trying to get myself into UX/UI design but it's all very overwhelming and costs of some courses completely out of my reach. You gave me something to start with thank you so much ❤❤❤ please start also Instagram, you're great at mentoring!
I’m happy to could help! I do have an Instagram by the same name: AlwaysCallingMeBlaze. There isn’t much there right now: I working on a new video series here and I want to get that done before I focus heavily on other platforms. But I do check it everyday!
Thank you, this has been the most real useful help I have found. I am taking the google ux program at Coursera now, do you know how it compares to the two you took? I am stuck right now with the wireframing and prototyping, I don't feel the course has given enough direction. I think I will try the the two you took before I throw in the towel.
What are the jobs one may start out with and what kind of pay? I really want to make a change, but I worry about starting over at my age my not pay off. Money is not everything, but it is the only thing that pays for having a life.
Hello! I’m glad it has been helpful!
I haven’t taken the Google UX course yet but I have read the syllabus and looked through the lessons.
I feel the Google course is a good and quick introduction but I feel it lacks in providing a proper explanation for the design process and how you need to THINK to do your job. The Michigan course teaches you the mindset of a designer and how you’d need to do your job. And when I got my first job, I had no issue with knowing what to do. That’s why I can recommend and Michigan course.
Entry level UI/UX designer positions are readily available. My first one asked for 3 years of experience and a Bachelor’s - neither of which do I have. But they hired me because they said I could explain my process and what and why I do things well.
Salaries are going to vary by location. But I think you could expect 70-90k for your first job, if you apply yourself and design process well.
You reckon 2 hours a day studying it's enough? I work full time and don't get much free time
It will vary - some assignments take a little bit longer than others. But, I spent probably 1-2 hours a day.
And at the same time, do it at your pace. It’s all about how well you apply what you learn. So, take the time you need to!
So helpful 🙂
Do you think these 2 recommended courses would be more beneficial than the Google IX course? I’m currently on the 2nd of 7 of the Google courses.
I haven’t taken the Google UX course personally. But I looked through their syllabus and their lessons. I still think the Michigan course is the better option. It’s more in line with what a UI/UX Designer does; the Google course gives me the impression that they’re showing you how THEY do things - and it’s a little backward. In my opinion.
Thank you for the feedback
Hey there, I found your video from Reddit. Do you recommend taking the Google certification courses? Or should I just take the courses you recommended? I’m looking to pivot into UX/UI design.
Hello! In my opinion, I prefer the courses I recommended over the Google UX course. The Michigan course follows the UX design method while the Google course seems to follow their own “flavor” if you will. I haven’t taken the Google course but I have read through their lessons and I still prefer the Michigan course.
@@alwayscallingmeblaze thanks for the prompt reply. I will go with your recommendations. Very impressive you got to where you are without a degree. I have a BA in psychology but these days a degree does not mean much anymore so hopefully I can make the jump to ux/ui from where I am now.
@@popcornchicken5552 I think your background in psychology will serve you very well. Most of the job (it should be, at least) is being able to advocate for users and to be able to think how they think so you can design for them. And the rest of it is technology stuff.
I give all of the credit to the success I found from the Michigan course. I spent a year trying to learn from UA-cam videos and didn't feel any more confident. And once I took their course, everything made sense. In my opinion and continued experience now as an actual UI/UX Designer, they teach the real deal.
@@alwayscallingmeblaze thank you! This one video has changed my outlook on the industry because I was always told that it was difficult to break into without some sort of computer science degree. But you proved that with a bit of work it’s possible, with or without a degree.
How long did you familiarize yourself with Adobe XD/Figma until you felt you were ready to take on the Coursera specializations? Thanks in advance.
Edit, NVM just saw your FAQ video! (1 month)
Yep! You’ll learn quite a bit as you go along. They are pretty simple programs.
Can these courses assist me in finding an online career as there aren't many decent chances in Pakistan?
I can only speak from my own experience.
But I am currently working from home 95% of the time. And I am allowed to work from anywhere in the country.
So, I think it gives a very good shot!
This sounds like me minus months and the job. I’ve never been more encouraged to pursue a new avenue than UI/UX. It tickles my tech, artsy and data interests.
I love techy-artistic stuff, but I have never been artistically talented. I can't draw to save my life and I can't do colors at all.
But the science/psychology side of UI/UX does that for me - and its just awesome to do!
@@alwayscallingmeblaze That's awesome! Glad you found it. Good luck on your journey.
i never did anything in graphic designing..can i still go through this course and learn everything or do i need to learn something before starting this course
I would recommend learning the software first before jumping into Coursera. You’ll learn some UI principles and stuff when you’re doing that. And then the CalArts course can help refine some of that.
You don’t need to become a fancy graphic designer at all! But it does help when you can make visual designs.
Did you started learning both coursera simultaneously or not? I'm in the process of learning the software side, Figma to be exact, and just want to start one of the two, cause I don't have enough time right now for both.
Just wanna say that your video changed my view on this subject as I'm trying to change my career and UX UI is something I really want to do and I'm highly motivated after this.
Hello! Yes, I did both at once. The CALARTS course is pretty simple compared to the Michigan course. But if you can only do one, do the Michigan course.
man one question, I'm finishing my formation in UI/UX, and I'm preparing myself to make a few projects and adding to my portfolio, I have 31yo and I'm feeling a little old for this do you think I'm too old to land a job as a JR ux/ui designer?
Not at all! I’m 34 and I started my first job THIS YEAR. Even then, I never think it’s too late to start a new career. If I didn’t, I wouldn’t nearly be this happy! Go for it!
GO FOR IT ,DONT WORRY ABOUT AGE. 31,34 BOTH IS VERY YOUNG
@@blazetechstudios thank you
How much would you say age affects hiring for entry level UX design? Yes, no discrimination and all that, but I'm curious before I invest more time and effort and more importantly, getting more excited about this line of work. I've spent most of my career as a police dispatcher and police records specialist. I'm 52 now and I've been taking UX Coursera classes for 3 months. Thank you in advance for your honest response.
Hello! I currently work with three UX Designers that I would say are middle aged, two have families. Two transitioned to UI/UX from another tech something and one is entry level - pretty much brand new to it. And I believe I am either the second youngest or youngest among the designers. So, I don’t really see age being an issue especially with there being so many positions open and it still being a somewhat emerging field.
So basically if I want to start from scratch and want to start my career in UX/UI design which two courses will be the best for me? And from which platform I can access those which will be a bit easy for me and also affordable?
Those two Coursera courses are what I used to start from scratch! I highly recommend them!
Great advice
Thank you!
I am just starting out on my journey and I have problems following through with the UX path. I need assistance in that regard
What issues are you facing and how can I help?
@@alwayscallingmeblaze UX is very broad but it's something I'd really like yo do. I've learnt quite a lot about it. My issue right now is to apply all the things I've learnt. Like, I'd like to work with someone who's currently working on something so I can learn first hand from that. That'll fasten my learning as well
@@eny_codes Gotcha. My upcoming video is exactly on that. But, it probably be out for a bit longer.
The Michigan course is really practical and has you actually do the job of a UI/UX designer. It doesn’t just tell you what they do, it has you actually do it and shows you how.
But I know exactly what you mean. Stay tuned, I think I will work harder to get that video done sooner. It will spell out every single step.
@@alwayscallingmeblaze No problems, I'll look forward to the video. I'll also check out the Michigan course as well. Thank you
@@eny_codes And I would be happy to help however I can.
We’ll make it happen somehow!