We've been fighting the good fight to get design at the table. Across companies large and small it's becoming standard to have design sit alongside business and engineering as a core partner. But getting to the table is just the beginning. What happens once you're there?
Presented August 7th, 2015 in Chicago at Prototypes, Process & Play
[Webinar] The 10 Ways You're Screwing Up Your Landing Page (And What To Do Ab...Unbounce
Peep Laja, Founder of the CRO agency Markitekt will present the lesser known mistakes that are killing your landing page conversions. Peep uncovers landing page mistakes you're probably making, but might not be even aware of!
Above all, he'll explain how to fix those mistakes and increase conversions.
3 Ways You Can Give and Get Good Design FeedbackZURB
Getting feedback can be awful, but it's necessary for building great products. And it doesn't have to hurt. It can be awesome when asked for and given correctly. Feedback helps you iterate on your process so you can design great products faster, hone in on specific interaction and push past roadblocks. In this session In this session, we'll dive deep into the tactics of soliciting great feedback, how to take it and discuss how to give valuable feedback to others.
The secret's out! The highest converting landing pages are built backwards. There's a formula for building effective landing pages and The Conversion Scientists are here to lay it out for you.
In this Unwebinar, Brian Massey and Joel Harvey:
- Show you how to build a landing page by starting at the end
- Teach you elements of any landing page
- Critique live landing pages from your fellow marketers
Beautiful (& Responsive) Web Typography: Designing for Readability and Meanin...Future Insights
Jason Pamental's talk from Future Insights Live 2014 in Las Vegas: "Responsive web design is one of the most significant advances in web design. But what about your type? We have to look at screen size, relative proportion, device norms and compatibility in order to best present our design and convey its meaning and intent across devices and screen sizes."
Miss Jason's talk? Join us at a future show: www.futureofwebdesign.com. Sign up for our newsletter at futureinsights.com and get 15% off your next conference.
Check out Jason's book on Responsive Typography here: http://bit.ly/rwtbook
[Webinar] The 10 Ways You're Screwing Up Your Landing Page (And What To Do Ab...Unbounce
Peep Laja, Founder of the CRO agency Markitekt will present the lesser known mistakes that are killing your landing page conversions. Peep uncovers landing page mistakes you're probably making, but might not be even aware of!
Above all, he'll explain how to fix those mistakes and increase conversions.
3 Ways You Can Give and Get Good Design FeedbackZURB
Getting feedback can be awful, but it's necessary for building great products. And it doesn't have to hurt. It can be awesome when asked for and given correctly. Feedback helps you iterate on your process so you can design great products faster, hone in on specific interaction and push past roadblocks. In this session In this session, we'll dive deep into the tactics of soliciting great feedback, how to take it and discuss how to give valuable feedback to others.
The secret's out! The highest converting landing pages are built backwards. There's a formula for building effective landing pages and The Conversion Scientists are here to lay it out for you.
In this Unwebinar, Brian Massey and Joel Harvey:
- Show you how to build a landing page by starting at the end
- Teach you elements of any landing page
- Critique live landing pages from your fellow marketers
Beautiful (& Responsive) Web Typography: Designing for Readability and Meanin...Future Insights
Jason Pamental's talk from Future Insights Live 2014 in Las Vegas: "Responsive web design is one of the most significant advances in web design. But what about your type? We have to look at screen size, relative proportion, device norms and compatibility in order to best present our design and convey its meaning and intent across devices and screen sizes."
Miss Jason's talk? Join us at a future show: www.futureofwebdesign.com. Sign up for our newsletter at futureinsights.com and get 15% off your next conference.
Check out Jason's book on Responsive Typography here: http://bit.ly/rwtbook
Create - Day 1 - 11:55 - "The Big Search Opportunity You Don’t Even Realise Y...PerformanceIN
Search and social are making a rapid shift towards using personalised data and structured mark-up to serve content, leaving the world of third-party, organic results behind.
As a consequence, some brands are lagging behind and failing to leverage the whole new world of traffic-earning opportunities that exist.
Pete's presentation runs through the latest structured data trends, with lessons on using mark-up, plug-ins and code to increase earnt traffic and click-through rates from from search and social - two of the fastest-growing marketing channels around.
Ahrefs Tutorial PDF which will help you to start using Ahrefs that really helpful for SEO. You can research keywords for your needs. Ahrefs also has data to analyze many traffic from visitors.
BERTology @ SEOkomm 2019 - Kai Spriestersbach - eology GmbHSEARCH ONE
Das größte Google Update seit 5 Jahren kommt. Was du jetzt wissen musst! Der Vortrag BERTology von der SEOkomm 2019 von Kai Spriestersbach, eology GmbH.
Wir begeben uns für diesen Vortrag in die Welt der Computerlinguistik auf Englisch: Natural Language Processing. Oder auch Natural Language Understanding.
Also mal langsam der Reihe nach…
BERT ist ein technologisch gesehen wegweisendes Modell zur Verarbeitung natürlicher Sprache. BERT kommt vom Google AI Team aus dem Jahre 2018
und hat die NLP-Welt im Sturm erobert!
BERT ist beispielsweise so gut im Beantworten von Fragen,
dass es das Squad 2 Leaderboard anführt.
Das ist quasi die Bundesligatabelle der NLP-Algorithmen.
Squad ist das Stanford Question Answering Dataset.
Stand Out From the Crowd: How to Make Your Website Amazingly, Incredibly, and...Stoney deGeyter
Why is my website not getting traffic? Why is nobody buying my products or services? How come I don’t get many repeat customers?
Stoney deGeyter will teach you how to build a web presence that people love, return to and remember to tell their friends about.
Learn why unforgettable websites deserve (and often earn) top search engine rankings that drive targeted traffic, sales, and profits.
Searchlove London | Oli Gardner, 'The Landing Page Manifesto' Distilled
In the only landing page session you’ll need to attend this year, Oli will deliver the 10 commandments of high-converting landing pages. You’ll see how to use contextual design and the psychology of conversion to build search marketing experiences that elevate your brand as well as your conversion rates. Watch as Oli tears bad experiences into a bloody mess before reconstructing them with a little conversion love.
This is the story of how we doubled the conversion rate on HubSpot.com, by leveraging a lean design process that's focused on rapid iteration and objectivity. Get an in-depth look at our distinctive UX process and how we've applied it at a public company with over 1,600 employees across 7 global offices. See exactly how it works and walk through every step of a real project, where we redesigned HubSpot.com in a period of less than 3 months. See the results, both quantitatively and qualitatively, and how we achieved them. Walk away with all of the information that you need to apply a similar process at your company. This isn’t another abstract process talk; it’s a hands-on session with actionable learnings and take-aways, backed up by data and a well-documented case study.
Designers shouldn't code - The wrong answer to the right questionMathias Hellquist
A presentation/lecture given at the worlds foremost education for Interaction and Innovation, Hyper Island (in Stockholm, Sweden).
It is meant as an introduction for designers to start seeing the possibilities with CSS, and to promote the idea of doing creative sign-offs (with clients) in the browser, which assumes the creative assets have been taken into the early stages of code in to a working prototype.
It is not meant to create developers of designers. It is meant to increase the knowledge level of designers, which has the added benefit (for them) of becoming more adjusted for future times in their work life, as well as the benefit of leaving the more advanced stuff to developers.
Both developers and designers would benefit from the designers designing suggestions that are easy to transform into code though.
Slides from my talk on the things I've learned by comparing the collaborative process as it is carried out in many modern organizations to the creative process of artists and makers.
"Wordpress And Your Brand" 2010 - By Sara CannonSara Cannon
WordPress and Your Brand
Adapt WordPress to your brand, not your brand to WordPress. We will be covering different aspects of WordPress and how it applies to company branding. We are going to look at good branding practices, examples using WordPress, and look into how we can give ourselves and our clients the best possible online presence. We are also going to talk about brand consistency online and offline, WordPress customization tips, and helpful plugins.
Presented by: Sara Cannon
Web design has changed by leaps and bounds in the last decade. In this presentation we discuss the evolution of website design, show compelling examples of modern site design, then explore examples of how these designs could be achieved in iMIS RiSE content management system.
Presented at the 2019 iMIS iNNOVATIONS conference.
6 Things to Think About Before Building Your WebsiteFloown
Building a website can be a daunting task. Without preparation even more so. Thinking about the following 6 actionable and practical topics will however make the task much easier to digest. In this Floown Slideshare we will be handling goals, design, technical solutions, styleguides, coding and debugging. 6 topics that are truly worth thinking about before building.
Design Thinking Meetup: Sparkle-ize It (or, what to do when you get a napkin)DesignMap
Every designer has had the experience at one point or another of having someone (usually a Product Manager, sometimes an Engineer) draw a screen for them, and ask them to take it and make it look good. Tools like Balsamiq and Axure are only making this more common. Writers, Product Managers and Engineers -- pretty much everyone with a boss or a coworker has experienced someone coming to them and assuming they were the end of the important process and just needed a little polish.
This happens for one (or many) of several reasons:
- They don't have time to think about or discuss alternatives
- They think it's the best solution
- They don't know how to connect the picture that's in their head with the goals they have in mind (or if they connect).
- They think you have little to offer besides making tarting up their idea ("Make it sparkly")
Too often, Designers assume point #4, get insulted, but sparkle-ize it anyway. It's demoralizing and often results in sub-par products (they are at least not as good as they could be). This happens in other contexts too: Researchers tell Product Managers how they should change their products. Designers tell Engineers how they should implement what's designed. Most of us are guilty of assuming #4 at some point, whatever our roll is.
This talk is about how to "reverse out" design thinking. How to look at a napkin drawing and work with the person who drew it to understand what their goals were when they made it, and to propose alternative solutions.
Conversely, if you think in solutions and can't help handing scribbles on napkins to your colleagues, it's about how to back out your own thought process and get more and better contributions from your colleagues.
Either way, it's about better solutions.
(Related blog post at http://www.designmap.com/practice/sparkle-ize-it/)
A comparison of traditional UX design documentation vs using prototypes to communicate and test design. Given at the San Francisco UX Designers meetup in January 2016.
Create - Day 1 - 11:55 - "The Big Search Opportunity You Don’t Even Realise Y...PerformanceIN
Search and social are making a rapid shift towards using personalised data and structured mark-up to serve content, leaving the world of third-party, organic results behind.
As a consequence, some brands are lagging behind and failing to leverage the whole new world of traffic-earning opportunities that exist.
Pete's presentation runs through the latest structured data trends, with lessons on using mark-up, plug-ins and code to increase earnt traffic and click-through rates from from search and social - two of the fastest-growing marketing channels around.
Ahrefs Tutorial PDF which will help you to start using Ahrefs that really helpful for SEO. You can research keywords for your needs. Ahrefs also has data to analyze many traffic from visitors.
BERTology @ SEOkomm 2019 - Kai Spriestersbach - eology GmbHSEARCH ONE
Das größte Google Update seit 5 Jahren kommt. Was du jetzt wissen musst! Der Vortrag BERTology von der SEOkomm 2019 von Kai Spriestersbach, eology GmbH.
Wir begeben uns für diesen Vortrag in die Welt der Computerlinguistik auf Englisch: Natural Language Processing. Oder auch Natural Language Understanding.
Also mal langsam der Reihe nach…
BERT ist ein technologisch gesehen wegweisendes Modell zur Verarbeitung natürlicher Sprache. BERT kommt vom Google AI Team aus dem Jahre 2018
und hat die NLP-Welt im Sturm erobert!
BERT ist beispielsweise so gut im Beantworten von Fragen,
dass es das Squad 2 Leaderboard anführt.
Das ist quasi die Bundesligatabelle der NLP-Algorithmen.
Squad ist das Stanford Question Answering Dataset.
Stand Out From the Crowd: How to Make Your Website Amazingly, Incredibly, and...Stoney deGeyter
Why is my website not getting traffic? Why is nobody buying my products or services? How come I don’t get many repeat customers?
Stoney deGeyter will teach you how to build a web presence that people love, return to and remember to tell their friends about.
Learn why unforgettable websites deserve (and often earn) top search engine rankings that drive targeted traffic, sales, and profits.
Searchlove London | Oli Gardner, 'The Landing Page Manifesto' Distilled
In the only landing page session you’ll need to attend this year, Oli will deliver the 10 commandments of high-converting landing pages. You’ll see how to use contextual design and the psychology of conversion to build search marketing experiences that elevate your brand as well as your conversion rates. Watch as Oli tears bad experiences into a bloody mess before reconstructing them with a little conversion love.
This is the story of how we doubled the conversion rate on HubSpot.com, by leveraging a lean design process that's focused on rapid iteration and objectivity. Get an in-depth look at our distinctive UX process and how we've applied it at a public company with over 1,600 employees across 7 global offices. See exactly how it works and walk through every step of a real project, where we redesigned HubSpot.com in a period of less than 3 months. See the results, both quantitatively and qualitatively, and how we achieved them. Walk away with all of the information that you need to apply a similar process at your company. This isn’t another abstract process talk; it’s a hands-on session with actionable learnings and take-aways, backed up by data and a well-documented case study.
Designers shouldn't code - The wrong answer to the right questionMathias Hellquist
A presentation/lecture given at the worlds foremost education for Interaction and Innovation, Hyper Island (in Stockholm, Sweden).
It is meant as an introduction for designers to start seeing the possibilities with CSS, and to promote the idea of doing creative sign-offs (with clients) in the browser, which assumes the creative assets have been taken into the early stages of code in to a working prototype.
It is not meant to create developers of designers. It is meant to increase the knowledge level of designers, which has the added benefit (for them) of becoming more adjusted for future times in their work life, as well as the benefit of leaving the more advanced stuff to developers.
Both developers and designers would benefit from the designers designing suggestions that are easy to transform into code though.
Slides from my talk on the things I've learned by comparing the collaborative process as it is carried out in many modern organizations to the creative process of artists and makers.
"Wordpress And Your Brand" 2010 - By Sara CannonSara Cannon
WordPress and Your Brand
Adapt WordPress to your brand, not your brand to WordPress. We will be covering different aspects of WordPress and how it applies to company branding. We are going to look at good branding practices, examples using WordPress, and look into how we can give ourselves and our clients the best possible online presence. We are also going to talk about brand consistency online and offline, WordPress customization tips, and helpful plugins.
Presented by: Sara Cannon
Web design has changed by leaps and bounds in the last decade. In this presentation we discuss the evolution of website design, show compelling examples of modern site design, then explore examples of how these designs could be achieved in iMIS RiSE content management system.
Presented at the 2019 iMIS iNNOVATIONS conference.
6 Things to Think About Before Building Your WebsiteFloown
Building a website can be a daunting task. Without preparation even more so. Thinking about the following 6 actionable and practical topics will however make the task much easier to digest. In this Floown Slideshare we will be handling goals, design, technical solutions, styleguides, coding and debugging. 6 topics that are truly worth thinking about before building.
Design Thinking Meetup: Sparkle-ize It (or, what to do when you get a napkin)DesignMap
Every designer has had the experience at one point or another of having someone (usually a Product Manager, sometimes an Engineer) draw a screen for them, and ask them to take it and make it look good. Tools like Balsamiq and Axure are only making this more common. Writers, Product Managers and Engineers -- pretty much everyone with a boss or a coworker has experienced someone coming to them and assuming they were the end of the important process and just needed a little polish.
This happens for one (or many) of several reasons:
- They don't have time to think about or discuss alternatives
- They think it's the best solution
- They don't know how to connect the picture that's in their head with the goals they have in mind (or if they connect).
- They think you have little to offer besides making tarting up their idea ("Make it sparkly")
Too often, Designers assume point #4, get insulted, but sparkle-ize it anyway. It's demoralizing and often results in sub-par products (they are at least not as good as they could be). This happens in other contexts too: Researchers tell Product Managers how they should change their products. Designers tell Engineers how they should implement what's designed. Most of us are guilty of assuming #4 at some point, whatever our roll is.
This talk is about how to "reverse out" design thinking. How to look at a napkin drawing and work with the person who drew it to understand what their goals were when they made it, and to propose alternative solutions.
Conversely, if you think in solutions and can't help handing scribbles on napkins to your colleagues, it's about how to back out your own thought process and get more and better contributions from your colleagues.
Either way, it's about better solutions.
(Related blog post at http://www.designmap.com/practice/sparkle-ize-it/)
A comparison of traditional UX design documentation vs using prototypes to communicate and test design. Given at the San Francisco UX Designers meetup in January 2016.
MIMA 2014 - Changing your Responsive Design Workfloweaselsolutions
Presentation slides from Dustin Tauer's 2014 MIMA Session:
What is your Web workflow? If your situation mirrors that of most organizations, the process often begins with some initial planning and discovery, followed by the design phase. In the design phase, Photoshop is opened and wireframes evolve into static designs. Once approved, these designs are passed to the developer which leads to testing, tweaking, and finally, launch. This workflow is great for traditional websites, but major evolution is needed to account for the changing landscape that is responsive design.
This session will present different strategies and processes for effectively designing and developing responsive websites. We’ll look at how taking a content-first approach rather than a design-first approach can significantly reduce the number of issues and iterations throughout the process. With mobile traffic quickly surpassing desktop traffic, a new workflow process is imperative to helping us be better prepared for the constantly changing device landscape.
One of the biggest challenges in the data age is overcoming the problematic belief that data has all the answers. The truth is – data is a resource, not a solution. In order to extract valuable and actionable insights, it is necessary to ask and re-ask certain questions. This talk is about figuring out what these questions are and exposes some of the limitations of common, and seemingly intuitive, approaches to data problems. As an alternative, I introduce the concept of using human-centered design principles and an iterative process to approach what you do with Big (and small) Data. As exemplars, I will walk-through a quick informal example and a real Datascope client project to highlight the flexibility and speed of these techniques.
Be a designer without becoming a 'designer'Nirish Shakya
In this presentation, Nirish shares 3 lean UX techniques you can use to become more user-centric and design minded without having the title of a 'designer'.
"Content First." Presentation - 2014 MSU IT ConferenceTrevor Barnes
"Content Strategy" and how it relates to a modern front-end web development workflow. Topics covered included content strategy, responsive web design, atomic design, pattern libraries, semantic HTML5 code, Sass, and UX. A focus was put on building and designing sites based on the client’s most important content goals. Content should drive design, not the other way around.
Similar to So You've Got a Seat at the Table. Now What? (20)
PDF SubmissionDigital Marketing Institute in NoidaPoojaSaini954651
https://www.safalta.com/online-digital-marketing/advance-digital-marketing-training-in-noidaTop Digital Marketing Institute in Noida: Boost Your Career Fast
[3:29 am, 30/05/2024] +91 83818 43552: Safalta Digital Marketing Institute in Noida also provides advanced classes for individuals seeking to develop their expertise and skills in this field. These classes, led by industry experts with vast experience, focus on specific aspects of digital marketing such as advanced SEO strategies, sophisticated content creation techniques, and data-driven analytics.
EASY TUTORIAL OF HOW TO USE CAPCUT BY: FEBLESS HERNANEFebless Hernane
CapCut is an easy-to-use video editing app perfect for beginners. To start, download and open CapCut on your phone. Tap "New Project" and select the videos or photos you want to edit. You can trim clips by dragging the edges, add text by tapping "Text," and include music by selecting "Audio." Enhance your video with filters and effects from the "Effects" menu. When you're happy with your video, tap the export button to save and share it. CapCut makes video editing simple and fun for everyone!
Hello everyone! I am thrilled to present my latest portfolio on LinkedIn, marking the culmination of my architectural journey thus far. Over the span of five years, I've been fortunate to acquire a wealth of knowledge under the guidance of esteemed professors and industry mentors. From rigorous academic pursuits to practical engagements, each experience has contributed to my growth and refinement as an architecture student. This portfolio not only showcases my projects but also underscores my attention to detail and to innovative architecture as a profession.
Between Filth and Fortune- Urban Cattle Foraging Realities by Devi S Nair, An...Mansi Shah
This study examines cattle rearing in urban and rural settings, focusing on milk production and consumption. By exploring a case in Ahmedabad, it highlights the challenges and processes in dairy farming across different environments, emphasising the need for sustainable practices and the essential role of milk in daily consumption.
Technoblade The Legacy of a Minecraft Legend.Techno Merch
Technoblade, born Alex on June 1, 1999, was a legendary Minecraft YouTuber known for his sharp wit and exceptional PvP skills. Starting his channel in 2013, he gained nearly 11 million subscribers. His private battle with metastatic sarcoma ended in June 2022, but his enduring legacy continues to inspire millions.
Can AI do good? at 'offtheCanvas' India HCI preludeAlan Dix
Invited talk at 'offtheCanvas' IndiaHCI prelude, 29th June 2024.
https://www.alandix.com/academic/talks/offtheCanvas-IndiaHCI2024/
The world is being changed fundamentally by AI and we are constantly faced with newspaper headlines about its harmful effects. However, there is also the potential to both ameliorate theses harms and use the new abilities of AI to transform society for the good. Can you make the difference?
Maximize Your Content with Beautiful Assets : Content & Asset for Landing Page pmgdscunsri
Figma is a cloud-based design tool widely used by designers for prototyping, UI/UX design, and real-time collaboration. With features such as precision pen tools, grid system, and reusable components, Figma makes it easy for teams to work together on design projects. Its flexibility and accessibility make Figma a top choice in the digital age.
3. Future of Web Design - So You’ve Got a Seat at the Table. Now What? @pnts
4. Future of Web Design - So You’ve Got a Seat at the Table. Now What? @pnts
interface | interaction | product
5. Future of Web Design - So You’ve Got a Seat at the Table. Now What? @pnts
6. Future of Web Design - So You’ve Got a Seat at the Table. Now What? @pnts
7. Future of Web Design - So You’ve Got a Seat at the Table. Now What? @pnts
-10=
8. Future of Web Design - So You’ve Got a Seat at the Table. Now What? @pnts
We’re BFFs
9. Future of Web Design - So You’ve Got a Seat at the Table. Now What? @pnts
10. Future of Web Design - So You’ve Got a Seat at the Table. Now What? @pnts
11. Future of Web Design - So You’ve Got a Seat at the Table. Now What? @pnts
12. Future of Web Design - So You’ve Got a Seat at the Table. Now What? @pnts
…getting to the table is
just the beginning…
13. Future of Web Design - So You’ve Got a Seat at the Table. Now What? @pnts
…getting to the table is
just the beginning…
14.
15. Future of Web Design - So You’ve Got a Seat at the Table. Now What? @pnts
16. Future of Web Design - So You’ve Got a Seat at the Table. Now What? @pnts
17. Future of Web Design - So You’ve Got a Seat at the Table. Now What? @pnts
18. Future of Web Design - So You’ve Got a Seat at the Table. Now What? @pnts
19. Future of Web Design - So You’ve Got a Seat at the Table. Now What? @pnts
Chief Design Officer
20. Future of Web Design - So You’ve Got a Seat at the Table. Now What? @pnts
Chief Design Officer
21. Future of Web Design - So You’ve Got a Seat at the Table. Now What? @pnts
business + engineering + design = product
22. Future of Web Design - So You’ve Got a Seat at the Table. Now What? @pnts
23. Future of Web Design - So You’ve Got a Seat at the Table. Now What? @pnts
24. Future of Web Design - So You’ve Got a Seat at the Table. Now What? @pnts
25. Future of Web Design - So You’ve Got a Seat at the Table. Now What? @pnts
26. Future of Web Design - So You’ve Got a Seat at the Table. Now What? @pnts
how does design add value?
27. Future of Web Design - So You’ve Got a Seat at the Table. Now What? @pnts
28.
29. Future of Web Design - So You’ve Got a Seat at the Table. Now What? @pnts
30. Future of Web Design - So You’ve Got a Seat at the Table. Now What? @pnts
31. Future of Web Design - So You’ve Got a Seat at the Table. Now What? @pnts
32. Future of Web Design - So You’ve Got a Seat at the Table. Now What? @pnts
33. Future of Web Design - So You’ve Got a Seat at the Table. Now What? @pnts
Alfred P. Sloan
CEO of GM
34. Future of Web Design - So You’ve Got a Seat at the Table. Now What? @pnts
Alfred P. Sloan
CEO of GM
dashing and
youthful!
35. Future of Web Design - So You’ve Got a Seat at the Table. Now What? @pnts
36. Future of Web Design - So You’ve Got a Seat at the Table. Now What? @pnts
37. Future of Web Design - So You’ve Got a Seat at the Table. Now What? @pnts
38. Future of Web Design - So You’ve Got a Seat at the Table. Now What? @pnts
“Even comfort, initially, was a secondary matter, and appearance, economy,
etc. got scant, if any, attention… Engineering was the all absorbing activity
and the engineer was usually the dominant personality… Even advertising
and the sales effort voiced largely the engineer’s convictions as to desirable
motor car features and characteristics…”
39. Future of Web Design - So You’ve Got a Seat at the Table. Now What? @pnts
44. Future of Web Design - So You’ve Got a Seat at the Table. Now What? @pnts
understand what already exists
CHALLENGE #1
VISION
45. Future of Web Design - So You’ve Got a Seat at the Table. Now What? @pnts
46. Future of Web Design - So You’ve Got a Seat at the Table. Now What? @pnts
47. Future of Web Design - So You’ve Got a Seat at the Table. Now What? @pnts
CHALLENGE #1
VISION
“Designer Leaders are not just hired to listen and consult, we are hired to lead.”
48. Future of Web Design - So You’ve Got a Seat at the Table. Now What? @pnts
CHALLENGE #1
VISION
what do you want design to be?
49. Future of Web Design - So You’ve Got a Seat at the Table. Now What? @pnts
Design
50. Future of Web Design - So You’ve Got a Seat at the Table. Now What? @pnts
51. Future of Web Design - So You’ve Got a Seat at the Table. Now What? @pnts
CHALLENGE #1
VISION
WWHED?
(What Would Harley Earl Do?)
98. Future of Web Design - So You’ve Got a Seat at the Table. Now What? @pnts
CHALLENGE #5
YOU
celebrate wins, learn from losses
99. Future of Web Design - So You’ve Got a Seat at the Table. Now What? @pnts
100. Future of Web Design - So You’ve Got a Seat at the Table. Now What? @pnts
CHALLENGE #5
YOU
always be learning
101. Future of Web Design - So You’ve Got a Seat at the Table. Now What? @pnts
102. Future of Web Design - So You’ve Got a Seat at the Table. Now What? @pnts
meeting of the minds
103. Future of Web Design - So You’ve Got a Seat at the Table. Now What? @pnts
104. Future of Web Design - So You’ve Got a Seat at the Table. Now What? @pnts
CHALLENGE #5
YOU
it’s a journey!
105. Future of Web Design - So You’ve Got a Seat at the Table. Now What? @pnts
106. Future of Web Design - So You’ve Got a Seat at the Table. Now What? @pnts
vision + buy-in + alignment + culture + you = value
107. Future of Web Design - So You’ve Got a Seat at the Table. Now What? @pnts
1927
1940
1950
Harley Earl joins GM
Harley Earl promoted to Vice President
Design has equal corporate decision making power
along with Finance and Engineering
108. Future of Web Design - So You’ve Got a Seat at the Table. Now What? @pnts
bit.ly/the-table
109. Future of Web Design - So You’ve Got a Seat at the Table. Now What? @pnts
“The future is something you do, not something that happens to you.”
“Don’t be in victim mode. Drive change.”
- Ian Swinson
- Catherine Courage