Hi again Justeen, I would like to ask you how to present the part which we have not added in the slides for ex : how to present the testing part when its not yet accomplish in the assessment due to time limit. Whether to present it in detail ? as to what I could have done if time permits from choosing the method to text X hypothesis and then evaluating or keeping it short ??
I think the best thing to do is to not get yourself in that situation, so budget time to test, show, walkthrough with a friend, family members. 15-30m testing will already give you good info. I bet you can spare 15 min somewhere. If you really don't get to test, at least have a plan of what to test, what assumptions to have, and know what to do if the result is A vs B. Or are you asking if you don't have enough time to present the testing portion during the presentation? If so, it's more about laying out what the test goals is, what the results are, and what you did with the info. Am I understanding you question correctly? Let me know! Or you can join the Discord to chat more!
@@Justeen15 Thanks Justeen. I didn't get chance to test but I did plan my test goals.So do I need to explain the same in detail during the interview??? Also, I have joined the discord channel already. Will reach out to you there in future 😀
I have had some very frugal design interviewers who do not set up follow-up meetings for you to present your design home assignment. They want you to send them a link and they review it on their own. I find this very frustrating and unethical. What are the other thoughts about this in the industry?
Hi Dana! As far as what I have experienced, it depends on the companies. I don't know what the company interview processes are like and what they were looking for exactly. I always sent them back my exercise to the best of presentation/document ability (ofc after I found out they care about visual so I pushed my deck/PDF hard on it). After that, either they invited me to another video call for a presentation, or didn't. The pattern I have observed so far: - I didn't pay attention to the visual and had too much text. I never got invited back - I paid attention to the visual and they invited me back for a presentation Which let me to the conclusion (also confirmed by a friend) that companies were looking for visual skills in these exercises, so if the initial presentation I sent them did not meet their visual bar, it would be a waste of time for both the my time and their time, so I wouldn't say that's unethical? I would say it is very frustrating that the companies were never explicit about what they were looking for so you were shooting in the dark. I had to learn through all those rejections myself. That's why I am trying to create these video series to share my experience and learning with everyone. Does that help? What do you think?
Your tips just helped me land a new job. Thanks mate!
Thank you and congrats!!! Out of curiosity, what specific in the video you find the most useful?
Great video! Some awesome tips here. Thank you 🙏
Thank you! Out of curiosity, what in the video do you find the most useful for you?
Really love your video 🥺😭So interesting, so inspiring and so helpful 😘😘😘😘😀😃
Thank you cheng! :) Let me know if I can answer any questions for you!
Hi again Justeen, I would like to ask you how to present the part which we have not added in the slides for ex : how to present the testing part when its not yet accomplish in the assessment due to time limit. Whether to present it in detail ? as to what I could have done if time permits from choosing the method to text X hypothesis and then evaluating or keeping it short ??
I think the best thing to do is to not get yourself in that situation, so budget time to test, show, walkthrough with a friend, family members. 15-30m testing will already give you good info. I bet you can spare 15 min somewhere.
If you really don't get to test, at least have a plan of what to test, what assumptions to have, and know what to do if the result is A vs B.
Or are you asking if you don't have enough time to present the testing portion during the presentation? If so, it's more about laying out what the test goals is, what the results are, and what you did with the info.
Am I understanding you question correctly? Let me know! Or you can join the Discord to chat more!
@@Justeen15 Thanks Justeen. I didn't get chance to test but I did plan my test goals.So do I need to explain the same in detail during the interview???
Also, I have joined the discord channel already. Will reach out to you there in future 😀
Which tip is the most useful? Let me know in the comment! There are most UX interview videos here: th-cam.com/video/SRSqWdX6ywY/w-d-xo.html
Really helpful
Thank you! Let me know if you have any other questions!
I have had some very frugal design interviewers who do not set up follow-up meetings for you to present your design home assignment. They want you to send them a link and they review it on their own. I find this very frustrating and unethical. What are the other thoughts about this in the industry?
Hi Dana! As far as what I have experienced, it depends on the companies. I don't know what the company interview processes are like and what they were looking for exactly.
I always sent them back my exercise to the best of presentation/document ability (ofc after I found out they care about visual so I pushed my deck/PDF hard on it). After that, either they invited me to another video call for a presentation, or didn't. The pattern I have observed so far:
- I didn't pay attention to the visual and had too much text. I never got invited back
- I paid attention to the visual and they invited me back for a presentation
Which let me to the conclusion (also confirmed by a friend) that companies were looking for visual skills in these exercises, so if the initial presentation I sent them did not meet their visual bar, it would be a waste of time for both the my time and their time, so I wouldn't say that's unethical? I would say it is very frustrating that the companies were never explicit about what they were looking for so you were shooting in the dark. I had to learn through all those rejections myself. That's why I am trying to create these video series to share my experience and learning with everyone.
Does that help? What do you think?
I K