Are you just trying to build something or are you trying to build something that people trust?
A client hired me to create a redesign of their Youtube banner.
Here's the before then the after. What do you think?
Build the silly idea.
You won't see the return for a while but it will happen.
Two roles in my career have come from random projects I built "for fun."
3 things I’ve learned why listening to this podcast:
- Don’t name your business after yourself eg Esther Dare Cosmetics
- Build your business like it could be acquired
- Start with yourself before trying to serve everyone else
It’s worth the listen.
I applied for a product designer role at a web3 company. They rejected me for someone who "shipped fast". Today I decided to check their site just to see how everything is going, and everything is vibe-coded (the usual gradient, lack of alignment, fluff shebang). 👇👇
Can I send them an email again telling them how they are positioning themselves wrong with a vibe-coded website that lacks taste, or would I sound too desperate? This is a real dilemma, so I will be waiting in the comments.
ALT Together, we mourn design—killed, according to X, approximately 847 times this year alone.
And yet, no matter how many times we declare design is dead, it is alive.
Design is everywhere, quietly thriving in the clarity of the subway map when you fear you have missed your stop, in the legibility of the dinner menu even when you aren't sure if sorrel is a vegetable or a new pasta shape, and in the dopamine-releasing notification that a meeting has been cancelled.
Design doesn't die. It is not a trend to be disrupted or a technology to be replaced. It's the difference between caring about how something makes you feel, not just if it works.
So here's to design—endlessly declared gone, endlessly proving everyone wrong.