Designers- Copy needs some love too

por Jesse Viana, UX & Content Writer at Monday

Have you ever stopped to think about words for a minute? They are everywhere — look around for a bit. Anywhere you look, online or offline, they are just so present that you often don’t even notice them being there. And that’s great! It means that they are doing their job of instructing, explaining, directing, and guiding us through physical and virtual journeys.

When you think about apps, websites, interfaces, and everything in between, could you imagine them being wordless? Words give them meaning, give them clarity, and empower them with context — so that we can, ultimately, make sense of things. Without words, they would be utterly unusable.

As a UX Writer, I think about words, sentences, punctuation, verbs, tone, and voice quite a lot. After all, writing is my way of designing, even if I didn’t realize it at first — and it should be accessible for everyone, even if you’re not a writer for a living. Designers of the world, let’s welcome some words into your life!

Writing as a Design process

The more you think about writing as a design process, the more striking the power that words have in sharing user experiences will be. One thing we know for sure is that without writing, UX Design wouldn’t be complete. Why did you ask? People need direction and meaning in their experiences, and words make design more UX friendly — it’s meant to be for users.

Design is all about communication, and it should always be a conversation between a product and its user. This is exactly what UX Writers do: the designing of words that people see when interacting with software (we tell you all about it in our previous article about UX Writing and Microcopy, delivering the right information at the right time, whenever needed be. It’s telling users what to expect of their experience).

Oh, and take on this great advice: it’s no longer enough to look at writing as an afterthought of the design process. Copy — by this, I mean the filling of words in the design interface — can make or break the user experience, and this calls for a cross-team collaboration between designers and writers early-on in the project so that everything works harmoniously. The result is the smoothest user experience possible.

The copy is as much part of the user experience as the flow and layout, and defining copy can actually make designers better.

how can copy make you a better designer?

Good UX is when design meets written language

If the content doesn’t deliver, even the most attractive page won’t hold the reader’s attention — and that’s why design is a process that should happen with content. Contrary to what’s been said, sometimes a picture is not worth a thousand words. And that’s super ok! This is why user-centered copy is vital to creating successful products and why UX Writing is the key to making users interact with products in the smoothest way possible.

UX Writers are aware of all the readability principles for users, so they need to be engaged in the creative process. UX Designers incorporate brand elements into their design in a usable way. UX Writers think about brand voice and how it manifests itself in the product. Think about it like this: designers think about buttons, forms, dialogue boxes, etc; and so do UX Writers — only with terminology and action words.

Andy Well, UX Content Strategy Manager at Adobe, and co-writer of the book “Writing is designing,” said it really well: “you have to be willing to be an evangelist and to spread the gospel of UX Writing; get designers excited about words, and how they can be used as design tools.”

Are you ready to get excited about words?

Keep on reading to know how to make your design great.

Best practices on designing with words

If you want to start mastering your texts but have no clue on how to do it, here are some of the best practices to take into consideration the next time you need to design with words:

Empathy is what makes your text sound like something you’d actually say to a human being, as we’re humans designing for other humans (sorry, sweet little R2D2’s of this world!).

Wise words of advice coming from John Saito, content designer at Dropbox (and a fun fellow to learn UX Writing advice from!). Saito believes that most people don’t like to read. Whenever someone is looking at text on a screen, they scan the words and don’t actually read them (yep, I think we can all agree on this, right? I know that I often do this myself).

Words should enhance people’s experiences and not complicate them — so be ruthless and write as clearly as you possibly can.

Your mission as a designer — and even more so as a UX Writer — is to take people on a journey, so choose words that increase their productivity, like verbs, for example. Encourage your user to take action by following your lead and, most importantly, allow them to go on their own discovery crusade.

The trick is to go for simple statements about key interactions and write in the present tense (*wink!*).

It always comes back to empathy, right? It’s imperative to cultivate it as much as possible — after all, we practice human-centered design. Products should be easily located and understandable, even by someone with different backgrounds, languages, cultures, etc.

Bring a smile to those who are reading! 🙂

How you write your words is also important — after all, no one likes to feel encouraged or defeated. Focus on what people can do with courage and optimism. Some good examples to start with are authentic and positive words, and forget about the “can’t” and the “don’t” vibes.

I know that it’s tempting to fill in the (early) voids of your interface with random Latin words. That way, you can design first and think about what to fill in the blanks with later, right? Wrooong.

Believe me when I say this: even if you’re not a writer, you have an idea of what should be communicated to the user, as you know what your product is about. Sketch out some ideas to use in the wireframes, and only use filler text which describes the copy that will be expected to be there. It will save you a lot of headache in the final stretch!

Simple and straightforward language ensures that every word is serving a specific purpose. When in doubt, reorder the words as many times as you need until it makes sense, and you feel like it brings clarity to your message. The point is to provide the user with context without overwhelming it.

As you probably know, writing must fit the same in every screen size, so don’t forget about flexibility across platforms. Language style, formatting, and tone should be the same in every one of them, as it fosters trust in the experience and helps the user focus on the content, not so much on the style.

Pssst: when designing larger screens, take advantage of the extra space to point out different features! You’re welcome.

Writing is design’s unicorn skill 🦄

Good writing can help you develop new and interesting ways of expressing an idea while being easily understandable, and words bring your personality into your design. I hope this article was helpful to you, and if you have any questions — or if you have something you want me to add — feel free to let me know!

See you next time, evangelists! 🙂

We really do want to hear from you! Get in touch

Monday is a Business Design Consultancy based in sunny Lisbon. We co-create with ambitious leaders to build better businesses. We use strategy & design to transform businesses from within.

Jesse Viana

UX & Content Writer @ Monday 

Meet Jesse

 

An easy guide to the difference between UX and UI

por Jesse Viana, UX & Content Writer at Monday

All around the design world, we often read the terms UX and UI close together — and the same way they coexist and complement each other, they also exist separately. Don’t worry, the line can be fuzzy, and the confusion is normal! But we’re here to help you get the full picture like a pro. By the end of this article, you’ll master the similarities, the differences, and how they work together.

Let’s start now, shall we?

User Experience (UX)

The name itself has the most important word: the user, who is in the center of the entire process, and to whom the navigation should be easy to understand, to use and whose purpose is to be simple and intuitive.

In its core, and being a broad field, it’s simply the study of the effect that design has in facilitating the use of a certain product or service. The interactive Experience starts when a user gets in contact with such a product or service, and it refers to all of the paths from beginning to end of its use.

It’s the process by which designers create products that give the users meaningful and relevant experiences, worrying about all of the steps that are part of human-service Interaction — empathy, usability, technology, and, of course, the human factor throughout its development. Basically, it’s both content architecture and the mapping of a website, operative system, app, or mobile device.

Good UX Design focuses on the interactive side of a product — the way it behaves, and in which way will it give its users a pleasant experience. It’s the personal and human side of technology, and it will be looking for the perfect harmony between the way it’s supposed to be navigated and the ease of the users’ pains and needs.

Its primary concern is guaranteeing the users an enjoyable and smooth experience, being through usability testing, intuitive interactions, productivity, or by triggering pleasurable emotions, as well as foreseeing the amount of value that the users will get out of the product/service.

On the other hand, when UX Design is not taken into consideration, we often get to situations that are, at the very least, super awkward: overly complicated websites, not being able to finalize payment checkouts, crazy forms that keep on crashing and deleting everything you type, that product that you don’t quite get how to use… you name it!

So, and to get you guys the big picture, we’re showing you an amazing project that will absolutely help you understand the concept of bad UX: “The Uncomfortable,” by architect Katerina Kamprani, is made of purposely uncomfortable and deliberately inconvenient everyday objects.

The Uncomfortable by architect Katerina Kamprani

The Uncomfortable by architect Katerina Kamprani

Super weird, right? Yep, that’s the point.

This is what happens when user experience is not taken into account, and by now, you can get the importance that UX actually represents — not only in the digital but in the real world as well. And this type of inconvenience and bad usability is precisely what User-Centered Design, the epicenter of UX, works to prevent.

Amongst the many advantages that this service brings to you, we highlight:

  • Better client experience;
  • Client loyalty;
  • Effectiveness on producing services and products;
  • Profit and a better business image

User Interface (UI)

As the name suggests, it’s all about the interface: the style, looks, and all the visual aspects on a site, app, etc. UI Designers want their projects to be easy to use but, and most importantly, they want them to be pleasant to the users.

Usually, this term refers to the graphic part of a project, but it can also include, for example, voice responding command systems such as Alexa or Siri. UI is, essentially, everything that the users see on their screen, all of the visual elements and its graphical components — such as buttons, menus, text, images, sliders, etc. To put it simply, it’s based on all of the micro-interactions between human and machine interfaces.

UI Designers focus on the look and feel, the style, and overall appearance of a system. Usually, they are also called Product Designers, as they worry about the aesthetics of a product and how they can cause a visual impact on the users.

So, every time we bump into style guides, fonts, iconography, visual hierarchy, button colors and type, animations, and the behavior of each Interaction, the invisible UI Designer’s strings are attached behind all of those components. They are the ones who work on how a product will impact the traction that we feel about a product.

Louder to the people in the back: UX IS NOT UI!

Now that we’ve gone (quite thoroughly!) through all of the concepts, it’s time to explain the differences between User Experience and User Interaction. Yes, one can say that everything’s UX, and even though UI’s is an essential part of it, they are not the same thing.

When it comes to Experience, the focus is on the interactive side of a product — how it behaves; whilst when it comes to Interaction it’s all about the visual aspect of that same product. Don’t get fooled by the confusion that the names can cause, the difference is quite simple. By now you already know it, right?

UX vs UI example

UX vs UI example

Here’s an example:

Imagine that a check-out page on a website (for this argument’s sake, let’s think about your favorite supermarket) needs a new button. The UI Designers will worry about its visual part — how’s it going to look like? What colors should we use? What’s the best type for the button’s text?; while UX Designers will worry about the reason why that button needs to be on that exact spot on the screen, with the purpose of solving any pains that users can be experiencing on that particular step of the process. These designers need previous research, usability testing, and constant changing of the project along the way so that they can achieve their goal: positively impact their future users.

They are responsible for the true understanding of their users — habits, needs, pain validation, and getting to a final product that attends directly to their needs. This is especially helpful when it comes to realizing what the client values, wants, or needs in the moment of buying/using something.

UI, on the other hand, worries about the development of the interface (may it be visual, or not) of a website, app, or system. It’s everything that needs to be used in order to better interact with the product, kind of like a “visual intermediary” that needs to be functional and intuitive — yes, the layout of what you see.

While UX designers may be thought of as macro interaction architects — also known as the customer’s journey -, UI designers are the architects of micro-interactions — the real way in which humans and machines interact. The first makes a product useful and helps to perform actions, while the second makes its interface pleasant and helps to establish emotional connections (this is what makes you come back).

Yes, they’re different, but they also walk side-by-side and keep on being updated throughout the process of finishing the project.

OK, so how do they work together?

Easy breezy: the UX designer determines how the interface works, and the UI designer determines its look (we know that we keep on saying this, but it’s ACTUALLY this easy!).

It’s an ever-evolving collaborative process, by which both teams work on close proximity — UX teams focus on the flow of a service/product, on the way by which the buttons that they create will help the navigation between tasks easier, and how the interface will serve the user’s needs; the UI teams work on how those elements will look on the screen.

If, and for example, amidst a project teams decide that certain elements must go — or that new ones must be created -, this is the type of change that requires a whole new spatial organization on the screen, so shapes and sizes must be rethought and rearranged. UX teams will take charge of the best way of doing so, while UI teams will adapt a new design so that everything fits together perfectly.

This collaboration between both teams is what helps to make sure that the final user interface is on its best behavior, by being simultaneously good looking, effective, and intuitive to use. Even though they need different skill sets, they are crucial to each other’s success. When all of the stars align, the final result is the best!

Thank you so much for getting to the end of this article!

We hope that the concepts are now fresh in your head and that you can successfully differentiate them. If you have any questions, we’re here to help!

We really do want to hear from you! Get in touch

Monday is a Business Design Consultancy based in sunny Lisbon. We co-create with ambitious leaders to build better businesses. We use strategy & design to transform businesses from within.

This core philosophy stands at the center of everything we create. Clients include: Mercedes, Red Bull, Banco de Portugal, Mars, Imprensa Nacional Casa da Moeda, Philips, Jogos Santa Casa, Guloso…

Jesse Viana

UX & Content Writer @ Monday 

Meet Jesse

 

Outros artigos de Jesse Viana

Designers – Copy needs some love too

 

How learning to code helped me

por Margarida Costa, Head of Marketing at Monday

Before joining Monday, I never thought my career would go through learning to code. I’ve always had an interest and a passion for technology, from playing computer games to loving the new features on the latest mobile phone.

Last year, I started working more closely with developers, which made me understand, in a deeper way, some skills I already had — probably built by the passion that led me here.

Whether you want to uncover the secrets of the universe, or you just want to pursue a career in the 21st century, basic computer programming is an essential skill to learn.

Stephen Hawking

Until then, the only code I knew was self-taught from previous working experiences, such as email marketing, developing websites and managing the design and web design teams.

Last September, I decided to consolidate this knowledge by joining a coding class, where I was able to build my own weather app (built-in React). In it, you can actually check the weather (live!) for the city you search:

https://mmc-final-project.netlify.com/

final project

This process taught me that we are always able to fulfill what we commit to. Code or engineering isn’t my background at all but, and with the right mindset, I was able to build a web app from scratch.

Everyone in this country should learn to program a computer because it teaches you to think.

Steve Jobs

I have always been a focused person, but this experience made me understand my thinking process better and how to deal (in a better way) with challenges. If you are learning how to code, you also know that feeling when you find that missing comma and your project starts to work. For me, this “I made it” feeling is the best.

I’ll now leave you some tips on how a programmer mindset can help you in your work, even if you do not code for a living.

sponge bob

 

0. Don’t Panic!

The motto for the “Hitchhiker’s Guide to The Galaxy” (one of my favorite books and movies) applies here: take a deep breath and think how far you have come.

Let’s take a look, another deep breath, [and/or]] if you need to stand up just take a small break and return. Ok, ready? Cool, let’s move on.

sponge bob 1

1. Understand the issue

Do you remember answering a test in school?

It’s the same logic: read all the questions [and] underline the requested task before you start answering.

To be sure that you’re fully grasping what’s the challenge, try to explain it out loud (or for yourself, if you are shy). Actually, this is why developers have a rubber duck, did you know? They speak out loud to the duck and sometimes the problem gets solved. Know more about this technique, here: https://tinyurl.com/yclnjqd9.

patrick

2. Make a plan

To me, making a plan is the best tool to avoid panicking. I start by writing down a list of what I need to do (or try to map my problem) and then the possible solution.

Our brain needs this exercise: if we start tackling the problem without a proper plan, we won’t focus on anything. It’s as if you’d start running in all directions, without knowing where the finish line is. In the end, you’d only get tired, without finding the finish line.

To start my plan, I like to ask myself: do I have a solution to this problem? If I don’t, I need to do some research. In most situations, someone already had the same issue.

sponge bob 2

3. Divide and conquer

Do you still remember step 0? Exactly: don’t panic.

Don’t try solving everything at the same time, there won’t be enough Kleenexes to wipe your tears.

Take the plan you have made and divide the problem into sub-tasks. No, you won’t end up with endless tiny problems in your life. The purpose of this step is to give you perspective. Instead of having a big problem you can’t solve, you’ll find smaller sub-problems you can actually solve — one by one.

When you look at something from afar, you’ll see the bigger picture: and then your problem won’t look so big after all (trust me in this one, I also made this same mistake in my junior years 😉 ).

These are, for me, the 4 main steps (yes, 0 counts!) to problem-solving.

I know you are thinking “this didn’t help at all, now I’m stuck in a sub-problem that I made!”. To that, I tell you: great! That means you have already solved the previous sub-problems! 🙂

[It’s] Easy: don’t panic. Right now, [it] might be a good time to take a break — if you can, sleep on it and tomorrow it’s going to be clearer. Give your head a rest. Starting anew also helps, save your work and open a new tab to start fresh. As I mentioned before: Google it! Believe me, you aren’t alone and someone already posted a solution or some note/comment that will help you.

Keep on practicing. Do you like crosswords or sudoku? Well, maybe you like video games instead. Those are great tools to train your brain to solve problems.

[I] Hope these steps will help you both in your work and personal life. Remember, no problem is unsolvable: all you need is to take a deep breath, make sure [that] you understood the issue (and even if it’s actually not an issue at all), make a plan, divide and start finding your solution.

Make every solution you find a small victory, again it’s all a matter of perspective.

We really do want to hear from you! Get in touch

Monday is a Business Design Consultancy based in sunny Lisbon. We co-create with ambitious leaders to build better businesses. We use strategy & design to transform businesses from within.

Margarida Costa

Head of Marketing  @ Monday 

Meet Margarida

 

You can only have great teams when you nurture courage and bravery in people

por Michael Nunes, Chief Creative Officer at Monday

How to build trust and an atmosphere of bravery has always been a concern for me. In all my years working in design, and from my recent perspective as a CCO, I believe that people need to feel comfortable around their coworkers.

If we put it in perspective, we spend more time with our coworkers and fellow colleagues than with our families.

This is a reality, and it’s our responsibility to build a culture where people can be their true selves.

Even research shows that diverse teams outperform non-diverse teams by significant margins, and in areas where it’s required creativity and new thinking, this type of culture is even more vital. More and more businesses should attain this mindset, especially when we live in a new world of constantly facing complex business problems.

And this, by consequence, requires everyone to channel their entire potential and skills to truly impact our society, which demands to lead by example.

“With high trust, success comes faster, better, and at a lower cost.” David Neeleman

To help you on your journey of building a true culture of trust I’m going to share an exercise about self-reflection that we did here at Monday.

Just a side note try this exercise at the beginning of your team’s day. You can achieve better results when everyone is at full energy. 😄💪

Step 1 — List every aspect of your identity

The best way to start the exercise is with the phrase “I am_______________”

After that, fill in the blank. First, hand out a piece of paper to all your exercising team members. On that paper, write down every word that comes to your mind when presented with the above sentence — yes, expect it to be a long list.

Then, emphasize how important it is to write everything that makes up your identity.

Every time I do this exercise, I give some of my own examples: I am a designer, father, retro motorcycle enthusiast, vinyl collector, and much more.

Remember our identities are composed of numerous aspects of ourselves, not just the little pieces we normally bring to work.

Step 2 — Unpack identities with your team

After having written down their lists, everyone shares their identities with the group. To make it easier, invite each one individually to present their identity aspects. Try to start with someone more at ease with talking in groups, it helps break the ice. After each person presented their list, guide a discussion around what elements of their identities people shared and what they omitted (some may have been purposefully or unconsciously).

Remember we are constantly depriving our friends and coworkers of what makes us, us.

Step 3 — Unveil your undisclosed identities

In this part of the exercise, think about which identities you tend to shelter or hide, and which of them you already brought into your work context.

Try stepping into a new situation, such as meeting a new team, or when you introduce yourself to a room of strangers. What do you normally hide?

As Keith Yamashita — author of this exercise — says “we have all this richness about us, and by not sharing these different aspects of our identities we deprive the world of our full talents and full self”.

Step 4 — Unpack identities with your team

Repeat step two. After writing your undisclosed identities share them with your group. This step will feel uncomfortable at first but remember — the goal is to build trust among your team, therefore creating a space where it’s safe to be your full self at work.

Exercise suggestions

  • Have a time frame to write in step 1 and step 3. Normally, I give them 10 to 15 minutes. This helps everyone focus, while also giving them time to really think about who they really are.
  • Be positive and embrace all hard topics that can emerge, especially in the third step.
  • You can unpack identities in a group or separate them into pairs. Personally, I like to unpack them to all the group participants, as it helps to put everyone on the same page.

Have you already tried this exercise or similar to this one? Share with us your experience, we would love to know what you think about a culture that nurtures trust & bravery.

Extra info

If you want to learn more about this exercise, I advise you to follow Keith’s Yamashita. You can find the original exercise article . You can even find a podcast about this Self-Reflection Activity.

More about Keith Yamashita:

 

We really do want to hear from you! Get in touch

Monday is a Business Design Consultancy based in sunny Lisbon. We co-create with ambitious leaders to build better businesses. We use strategy & design to transform businesses from within.

This core philosophy stands at the center of everything we create. Clients include: Mercedes, Red Bull, Banco de Portugal, Mars, Imprensa Nacional Casa da Moeda, Philips, Jogos Santa Casa, Guloso…

Michael Nunes

Chief Creative Officer  @ Monday 

Meet Michael 

 

It’s all in the details: an introduction to UX Writing and Microcopy

por Jesse Viana, UX & Content Writer at Monday

UX Writing: improving user’s experience with small details

What’s the importance of UX Writing, you might ask? It’s very simple and it comes down do this: it must tell the users what they need to do, where they are and where they’re going next. Its purpose is to guide, to lead and, most importantly, to help them achieve (successfully) what they came looking to do. It needs to offer solutions, to solve problems, and to actively engage with the users.

  1. Use straightforward and understandable language, accessible to everyone (yes, even to a five-year-old). But don’t talk too much: keep it to the essentials your user needs to know in order to complete its task.
  2. Understand who you are, what your product is, and who your audience and target are. Think about what you want them to feel while interacting with your product and, most importantly, what you don’t want them to feel.
  3. Speak directly to the users, embrace the power of “you”. This will help establish a good relationship on both-ends, while immediately catching their attention. And always ask yourself: How will your product make their life better?
  4. Don’t forget to always read what you wrote, to edit whatever you don’t need, as many times as you see fit, and to always let your users know what they are looking at. It may seem super basic information, but trust me: it’s important!
  5. When you have your tone-of-voice settled, your product’s benefits and features all sorted out, and when you finally understand who you are and who your customers may be, you are finally ready to describe whatever you’re communicating in a simple and understandable way.

What is Microcopy? Isn’t it the same as UX Writing?

The answer to this question is simple: microcopy actually addresses product concerns far beyond UX. But if we settle for microcopy as UX writing, we cut out extra benefits before we even start writing. It’s essential to look at them as a full package, as complementing one another. Let’s learn the difference between them.

All of my learnings came from these amazing articles:

https://www.invisionapp.com/inside-design/ux-writing-5-f-words/

https://www.invisionapp.com/inside-design/10-ux-copywriting-tips-designers/

https://medium.com/talking-microcopy-writing-ux/go-to-guide-for-ux-writers-copywriters-and-content-strategists-3f216e0a0aa0

This is a work in progress, so expect more from me in the coming months! I hope you enjoyed learning this bit with me, and I hope I can keep sharing my knowledge with you. If you’d like to know more about any other subject, feel free to give us a shout out on the comment box! I love learning as much as I love reading. Tchuss!

We really do want to hear from you! Get in touch

Monday is a Business Design Consultancy based in sunny Lisbon. We co-create with ambitious leaders to build better businesses. We use strategy & design to transform businesses from within.

This core philosophy stands at the center of everything we create. Clients include: Mercedes, Red Bull, Banco de Portugal, Mars, Imprensa Nacional Casa da Moeda, Philips, Jogos Santa Casa, Guloso…

Jesse Viana

UX & Content Writer @ Monday 

Meet Jesse

 

Tell me what you’re reading, we’ll tell you who you are

1. Las venas abiertas de América Latina by Eduardo Galeano.

2. States of Mind — New discoveries about how our brains make us who we are by Roberta Conlan

3. Sprint — How to Solve big problems and test new ideas in just five days by Jake Knapp

4. Cebola Crua com Sal e Broa by Miguel Sousa Tavares

5. Deep Work: Rules for Focused Success in a Distracted World by Cal Newport

6. 101 Essays That Will Change The Way You Think by Brianna West

7. Lean In: Women, Work, and the Will to Lead by Sheryl Sandberg

8. The Paradox of Choice: Why More is Less: How the Culture of Abundance Robs Us of Satisfaction by Barry Schwartz

We really do want to hear from you! Get in touch

Monday is a Business Design Consultancy based in sunny Lisbon. We co-create with ambitious leaders to build better businesses. We use strategy & design to transform businesses from within.

This core philosophy stands at the center of everything we create. Clients include: Mercedes, Red Bull, Banco de Portugal, Mars, Imprensa Nacional Casa da Moeda, Philips, Jogos Santa Casa, Guloso…

The Cannibalization of Time

por Nuno Sobrinho, Business Designer at Monday

1. Because we do things wrongly

We need to question more and all the time. We need to question ourselves if there’s another way to perform the way we desire that would easier our life. Because we tend to accommodate and not question, we end up being very good and proficient doing things wrongly. If I use a tool or an interface to perform an activity for years, ignoring new tools and continuous improvement to make our days easier, I not only procrastinate innovation and adaptation but end up spending time instead of saving it.

2. Because we do not prioritize

Human beings have big struggles prioritizing. Distinguish what is considered urgent to perform from what is important, is hard. The emergency room here pops up when I reach a point where my agenda is full of urgent things and a few more important. This generally happens when we let important things drag for days until they transform themselves into urgent scenarios. The trick here is to manage well important things, so we can avoid them transform and become urgent. This way we can have more important things on the agenda than urgent, as long as we know how to manage and work it out. Knowing why, how and what to prioritize is critical. The more expert in prioritizing we can be, the more we promote time-saving.

3. Because we resist to change

Resistance is inherent to our nature. We resist more than we let flow. It is positive to resist a few things, namely, some food temptations or harmful addictions for example. Though, when talking about time under this subject, resistance is usually not a good friend. “Time flies”, it’s commonly said. Additionally, the environment we live in is changing faster than we have ever seen. If around us the speed of change is overwhelming, how can we resist to change that much? How’s it acceptable that we spend such a big amount of time resisting and doing the same old things or having the same old approach? We resist because we fear to fail, we resist because we prefer to stay comfortable where we are, we resist because we don’t feel comfortable in what we perceive as an uncomfortable context. We resist because we reject the unknown. Unknown doesn’t make us feel right nor confident. Sometimes I embrace projects where a client wants to discuss solutions in-depth on our first or second meeting, even before the official kick-off. How can we possibly know the solution at this stage, if we haven’t done any sort of inspiration activity yet? How can we possibly know what the solution might be if we didn’t bring the people we are designing for to the table yet? Because we resist, we don’t capitalize time, and we keep applying the same errors, same methods, same thoughts, which makes us spending time, though without acknowledging it.

4. Because we have no Plan B

Plan A is, generally, our only bet. If an unforeseen issue occurs and plan A doesn’t go through or as we planned, we feel we’re screwed. We tend to not dedicate any time thinking about a plan B, prior to action. We avoid good, thorough and structured plan. What if plan A doesn’t go well? What if we can’t make this happen? What can we prepare in case this doesn’t go as considered? Can we avoid the worst by having a backup?

5. Because we just don’t make it simple

This one is my favorite! The human being is not minimalist by nature. But we have to, more than ever. Technology, for example, changes too quick nowadays. We’re barely capable to follow daily news with the amount of information we’re faced with when we wake up and check our phone. If we don’t cut the extras and focus on what’s really necessary, we’re just spending extra time on things we don’t have to, and we shouldn’t. Minimalism is today, a great ally to perform efficiently and on schedule.

We really do want to hear from you! Get in touch

Monday is a Business Design Consultancy based in sunny Lisbon. We co-create with ambitious leaders to build better businesses. We use strategy & design to transform businesses from within.

This core philosophy stands at the center of everything we create. Clients include: Mercedes, Red Bull, Banco de Portugal, Mars, Imprensa Nacional Casa da Moeda, Philips, Jogos Santa Casa, Guloso…

Nuno Sobrinho

Business Designer @ Monday 

 

 

How to start your UX Design career. In a good and affordable way

por Michael Nunes, Chief Creative Officer at Monday

1. Start learning from experts

First of all, I recommend you browse a few online courses, as those will help you get started on UX Design. Said online courses have major advantages, such as you being able to take your own pace and also by some of them being taught by major UX Design players. Oh, and they are usually cheaper than the physical courses.

Interaction Design Foundation

The Interaction Design Foundation is a 17-year-old nonprofit community founded in Denmark. In addition to the online courses, they also offer free of charge content about design.

Udemy

Udemy is the leading global marketplace for teaching and learning, connecting all students everywhere to the world’s best instruction — no matter where they are.

IDEO U

Who hasn’t heard of IDEO? IDEO has a learning program called IDEO U, an online school where anyone can unlock their creative potential and solve complex problems through design thinking. Here, you can learn from the best on how to be an expert on Design Thinking, Prototyping for Digital Experiences and other courses around Human-Centered Design.

2. Never stop reading

If you don’t have the money to spend on a lot of books, just use Medium. You’ll find tons of awesome articles about UX Design. Believe me, you have excellent content and it’s all for free.

3. Books: ‘Gotta catch them all!

As you can imagine, there are a lot of great books out there about UX design but, obviously, I haven’t read them all. Nonetheless, I’ve had my share of good reading, and these are the best of the best (in my opinion) to help you gain more knowledge to make the shift.

The Paradox Of Choice: Why More Is Less

One of my favorites, and if you happen to have read other articles that I wrote, or if you are following me on LinkedIn, you already guessed it. The Paradox Of Choice: Why More Is Less by Barry Schwartz. In this book, you won’t be reading on how to create the best UX strategy. What you — surely — will learn, is how choice impacts our lives, either in a good or in a bad way. This book won’t be a one time only read, I assure you. It will help you understand and interiorize the importance of analyzing and will reflect on how we can elevate people’s lives.

UX Strategy: How to devise innovative digital products that people want

A great guide to have by your side. Whether you’re an entrepreneur, a Designer or a Product Manager, this book teaches you simple-to-advanced methods that you can use in your work right away.

Mapping Experiences: A complete guide to creating value through journeys, blueprints & diagrams

One of the heavyweight champions of UX books. In this Jim Kalbach book, you’ll find the best methods to implement UX strategies and to understand the underlying principles of diagramming, and also discover how these diagrams can inform strategy. If you’re a Product Manager, a Designer or a Business Owner, there you’ll learn how to help your business (or your projects), how to know your business goals, and how customers’ perspectives intersect.

Don’t make me think

An old one, but still a must-have one. This book, by Steve Krug, is as straightforward as its title, a friendly introduction to why some interfaces work or “make sense” for users while some others don’t. You’ll find a lot of useful information about usability and on how you can use it on your projects. It still strikes me that some UX “tactics” are just common sense, but applying the right UX in the right context, in advance, is not so obvious in many product teams.

4. Tools for our craft

It’s important to learn how to use some of these tools that I’ll be talking about. But keep in mind that if you’re already working as a UI Designer, some of them are already known to you.

Paper Prototyping

Paper prototyping is a technique that allows designers and non-designers to create, and to test, user interfaces quickly and cheaply. Don’t forget — it’s easier to change a prototype than to change the final design. Sketching helps testing ideas, rather than focusing on the visual part of the project.

User Flows

The user flow is a series of steps that users take to achieve a meaningful goal, they are the path taken by a user on a website, or an app, to complete a task. This flow shows us the user’s entry point through a set of steps towards a successful outcome and final action, such as purchasing a product or subscribing a service.

InVision

With intuitive tools for ideation, design, prototyping, and design management, the InVision platform gives you everything you need for digital product design — all in one place. The most known tool InVision is recognized for is its prototyping aspect. It helps us create easy and low-cost prototypes. This way, you’ll be able to test, in early stages, what’s working (or not) in your project.

5. Skills you need to start working on. They will help you create better and lovable projects

Observe and listen

Observe the world around you. In my opinion, one of the more difficult skills, and maybe that’s why it’s one of the more important ones, is observation. It’s a behavior that will help you to better understand the differences in social groups, cultural practices, and other people’s way of behaving — whether they are online or offline — and all the problems they may face in their daily lives.

Empathy

If you haven’t heard of it yet, UX Design goes hand-in-hand with empathy. The ability to empathize with the user is a key skill for a UX Designer.

Facilitation

As a designer, it’s important to learn how to facilitate design sessions. You don’t have to be the superhero of said design sessions, but this helps you practice empathy, your listening skills and acknowledge people’s’ true pains and ideas. The job of a facilitator is to conduct design sessions, and these sessions might be through Lighting Decision Jams, Value Propositions, UX Strategy guides, and many other exercises.

We really do want to hear from you! Get in touch

Monday is a Business Design Consultancy based in sunny Lisbon. We co-create with ambitious leaders to build better businesses. We use strategy & design to transform businesses from within.

This core philosophy stands at the center of everything we create. Clients include: Mercedes, Red Bull, Banco de Portugal, Mars, Imprensa Nacional Casa da Moeda, Philips, Jogos Santa Casa, Guloso…

Michael Nunes

Chief Creative Officer  @ Monday 

Meet Michael 

 

Design Tools for Monday 🧰

Welcome to Design Tools for Monday. This is our second round of design tools. Here we show what tools we’ve been using or new ones we discovered for the past months. Here’s what’s on the menu:

slack  

Slack is more than a chat. It’s one of the most used tools for communicating with others in the digital world.

You can chat directly with someone or create specific conversation channels. Also, it allows you to send files and integrates effortlessly with many design platforms.

Slack has a dedicated app page with bots and plugins that you can install to improve your work.

eventbot

It’s a Slack app for scheduling events.

We use Eventbot Calendar a lot to schedule our meetings and weekly home office days.

You can create and name an event, receive notifications and integrate with your calendar.

google docs

Google Docs is a universal tool.

In one place you have the equivalent of Microsoft Word, Excel, Powerpoint and Calendar, and they are all for free.

You can use it in all areas of your work, to integrate work and personal schedules such as holidays and anniversaries, to do team office management, to write text documents and make your own presentations. Also, you can receive notifications into your smartphone.

google drive

4. Google Drive

Google Drive is a cloud storage service. It’s a place online where you can store all your documents and expand the capacity of your hard drive. You can share folders with others and restrict access to specific functions.

If you have a Gmail account you have 15GB for free.

trello

Trello is an online platform to organize your workflows and tasks just for you or between your teammates.

It’s very easy to create and edit boards and to drag and drop them. Besides that, if you use Jira, Slack, Invision, Google Drive and other apps, it’ll be a boost for your workflow because Trello can integrate with them.

todoist

With Todoist you can organize your life through tasks in a daily timeline and receive reminders to keep you in charge. You can even track your productivity with graphics that give you all the information about what you are doing and it also synchronizes everything with your devices.

wetransfer

WeTransfer is the best way to send files to anyone and one of the most useful tools around the world that allow you to share up to 2GB for free (for each upload).

Simply upload your file(s), choose your destination email and that’s it!

fontbase

Fontbase has the capability to use all web fonts without installing them.

It’s very useful for teams that share editable documents; even clients are adopting it.

If you don’t have a specific typeface, just install Fontbase, turn it on and magically solve all your problems.

ios res

“iOS Res” is a very useful website for designers that shows all iDevice resolutions on the market. You have access to all specifications, such as logical resolutions and equivalences for iOS devices that helps you to create better digital designs.

usepanda

If you are a creative director, designer, copy editor, developer, consultant or even a community manager, you can Usepanda, literally!

You can access the most relevant and useful websites for your specific purposes all in one location. You can personalize new browser tabs the way you want, with the information you want.

Dribbble, Awwwards, Medium, CSS-Tricks, Smashing Magazine, Wired, and many, many other great sources.

For now, that’s all folks! Stay tuned for the next round of tools.🤓 🧰

Hope you guys enjoy these tools as we did.

We really do want to hear from you! Get in touch

Design Tools for Monday 🧰

Welcome to Design Tools for Monday. This is our first design tools roundup. Here we show what tools we’ve been using for the past years and some we’ve been exploring recently.

rotato

Design Camera is an app for Mac users. It’s a simple app to create and capture your designs into an animated 3D mockups. There isn’t any toll so quick as Design Camera. And of course it’s simple, this app is made by Morten Just from Google.

shotsnapp

Simple and quick. shotsnapp is a web-based tool that lets you create beautiful device mockup images to show off your mobile app or website either using your design file or screenshots.

flowbase

Webflow is a professional design & development tool for building and deploying responsive websites and products.

interfacer

Who doesn’t love free resources to speed up any project? Interfacer is just that resources a click away.

coolhue

Right there by your side and in Sketch. CoolHue is the Coolest handpicked Gradient Palette and Swatch for your next super amazing stuff.

blobmaker

This is our new favorite. Ever needed to created one of those blobs? Blobmaker it the perfect tool for making quick and easy blobs. Just save it on one of your tabs, you will love it.

invision

I believe this one doesn’t need any presentation. We just can’t live without it for some years.😎

zeplin

We make Zeppelin words our own words. “We believe designers and developers should always work together to build products that delight users all the way from idea to production.”

overflow

At its core, Overflow focuses on three main benefits, syncing designs, designing beautiful user flows, and presenting them the most efficient and engaging way possible.

unsplash

Make something awesome. For us, they are getting better and better and providing the best photography out there. And above all, for free. 🙂

For now, that’s all folks! Stay tuned for the next round of tools.🤓 🧰

Hope you guys enjoy these tools as we did.

We really do want to hear from you! Get in touch