I think in visuals. When I'm working through a system, concept or UI, I nearly always start with pen on paper, even if its just words, scribbles, and rectangles. Thinking visually is something most people stop doing as soon as art class isn't a requirement, for many this is in grade school, which is a travesty. Learning to visualize our ideas is an important skill in all kinds of fields, not just design.
Dear Photoshop: I love you and I hate you
Dear Adobe Photoshop,
It's not me, its you. While I appreciate that you're the only tool capable of handling complex image manipulation, I had to leave all of your complexity and feature explosion behind. While I see great potential in Adobe XD as a tool for building both UI and flows, it's simply become too unwieldy to use you for UI.
Deeper Dive: Bank of America
Me leading a visioning session with Bank of America at Carnegie Mellon
I lead a structured an ideation session around three key activities, each one with a separate goal that would move us from research into the design and build phase. Ultimately, the session proved so fruitful that nearly every other Capstone team copied our same methodology (partly because we did our presentation first and everyone followed). Here’s what we did:
Why The Hell Did I Go To Grad School Anyways?
While others picked a path and climbed the career ladder I had become a generalist: recruiters didn't know where to put me, and creative directors often thought I was both too senior and too unfocused for a regular designer role. As a result I felt like I was treading water rather than gaining ground.