Return to Main Article – Transferable Skills Guide Overview
Sourcing tech professionals with certain emerging or hard-to-find skills can be a challenge – even for the most seasoned recruiter. In the fourth installment of our seven-part “Transferable Skills Guide” series, we look at the UX Designer role and skill-sets in other disciplines that translate to success in web design positions. Use these tips to better evaluate tech candidates and build a bigger pipeline of talent.
In the worlds of web and software development, design used to be synonymous with aesthetics. However, with consumers demanding equal parts beauty, ease and utility in every site and application they use, design has broadened to encompass new skills and capabilities. Yes, your User Experience Designers should have graphic design skills. Those skills are not sufficient though. Let’s explore what allows tech professionals to successfully design software components, user interfaces and create information architecture for the web…
Design is more than making pages look pretty. It’s about solving real customer problems. The interesting thing about UX designers is that most of the time, they don’t need to have experience in specific software programs or technologies to do a great job. Instead, it’s more important they know how to apply their skills across a set of tools.
The best UX understand customer research, are passionate about the user experience, and are able to take feedback well. The tools themselves matter less in this role than other roles. For your UX hires, look for someone who can bob and weave between those areas that consumers demand – beauty, ease and utility.
View Transferable Skills Guides for other tech positions below:
Dice Staff
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