Podcasts about fabricio teixeira

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Best podcasts about fabricio teixeira

Latest podcast episodes about fabricio teixeira

UX Collective
The State of UX design in 2025

UX Collective

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 1, 2024 10:14


Things have been feeling differently for a while. That UX buzz, that peak we hit in the late 2010s, has faded. Historically, designers have always aimed to exert vast influence within their organizations, guiding the creative vision and making critical decisions that shape the product. That reality simply doesn't feel palpable anymore when you look at the state of UX more broadly. UX is increasingly a byproduct of business objectives, not the driving force. What we have started to witness this year is a fundamental shift in responsibilities and a transfer of design control from designers to a complex network of algorithms, automated tools, and business stakeholders: the great design handoff. Read the full report: trends.uxdesign.cc/2025 Written by Fabricio Teixeira, Caio Braga Narrated by Laura Vandiver The UX Collective (ISSN: 2766-5267) is an independent design publication and blog built to help designers think more critically about their work.  Subscribe to our newsletter

ux historically ux design fabricio teixeira
DesignTeam
Bom Dia UX 148 - Como estudar UX de forma estruturada? Com Ruben Ferreira

DesignTeam

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 7, 2024 64:16


Aprender design de experiência de forma estruturada envolve adquirir conhecimentos sobre os princípios fundamentais, desenvolver habilidades práticas e ganhar experiência prática. Aqui estão algumas etapas que podem ajudar: Compreender os Fundamentos Educação Formal Leitura e Pesquisa Prática Contínua Ferramentas de Design Participação em Comunidades Onlineão: Ao incorporar esses elementos em sua jornada de aprendizado, você estará construindo uma base sólida para se tornar um designer de experiência mais completo e eficaz. Lembre-se de que o design de experiência é uma disciplina em constante evolução, então esteja preparado para aprender continuamente e adaptar suas habilidades às mudanças na indústria. Tornar-se um bom designer de experiência envolve um comprometimento contínuo com o aprendizado e o desenvolvimento de habilidades. É importante adquirir conhecimentos e habilidades em diversas áreas. Aqui estão algumas diretrizes específicas para ajudá-lo a trilhar o caminho para se tornar um designer de experiência eficiente: Construa um Portfólio Entenda o Processo de Design Compreensão do Negócio Desenvolva Habilidades de Comunicação Mantenha-se Atualizado. Aprimore suas Soft Skills Além desses tópicos, a prática constante e a participação em projetos práticos e diversos são cruciais para consolidar seus conhecimentos. Considere também procurar oportunidades de networking e mentorias para acelerar seu desenvolvimento profissional. Dicas de livros: Design centrado no usuário, de Travis Lowdermilk https://amzn.to/3SvUgyrIntrodução e boas práticas em UX Design, de Fabricio Teixeira https://amzn.to/3w7YLYxThe Elements of User Experience, de Jesse James Garrett https://amzn.to/3OBJrtjDesign para quem não é designer: princípios de design e tipografia para iniciantes. Autor: Robin Williams https://amzn.to/3OvZt8b

UX Collective
The State of UX design in 2024

UX Collective

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 26, 2023 17:18


Much like late-stage capitalism, late-stage UX is characterized by its market saturation, heavy focus on financial growth, commoditization, automation, and increased financialization. Corporations exert significant influence over the economy and society, and designers can only push so far when advocating for user needs. How can we navigate this landscape as designers in 2024? Read the full report: trends.uxdesign.cc/2024 This is the 9th edition of The State of UX report by the UX Collective: a critical look at our industry based on more than 1k articles published and shared with our 500k+ subscribers in 2023. We dedicate this project to all the readers, authors, and friends of the UX Collective. Written by: Fabricio Teixeira, Caio Braga Illustrations by: Fabio Benê Edited by: Emily Curtin Narrated by: Laura Vandiver Published by: The UX Collective (ISSN: 2766-5267) is an independent publication built to help designers think more critically about their work. You can follow our content via Email, Medium, Essays, Twitter, Linkedin. For more in-depth pieces, check our new publication DOC.

UX Collective
The State of UX design in 2023

UX Collective

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 3, 2022 14:14


The 9th edition of The State of UX report is here: a critical look at our industry based on 761 articles published and shared with our 500k+ subscribers in 2022. In culture, as well as in design, things sometimes change at an accelerated pace, and a once-dominant social wavelength can suddenly start to feel dated. The year 2023 brings the culmination of various changes in the realms of technology, behavior, and society that have been underway since before COVID. As designers, instead of simply flocking from one new thing to the next, this is the time to think critically about the direction our industry is heading — and the path we want to walk ourselves. Topics covered: Industry: How after a few years of unrealistically fast growth, #layoffs are a specter haunting our industry. Business: When budgets are tight, the case for investing in design needs to be even tighter. Careers: How shrinking headcounts increase the demand for generalist designers and hands-on leaders. Collaboration: How too many circular conversations and not enough decision-making is undermining design work. Community: Social media influencers have replaced design researchers and authors—and now it's the algorithm that's driving the design discourse. Aesthetics: While web2 keeps trying to make technology look and feel more human, web3 tries to make technology look more… technological. Technology: Artificial intelligence is making its way to our design workflow faster than we're ready to accept. Tools: Design tools are evolving to make us spend less time moving around boxes, and more time having the right conversations. Life: Pushing ourselves too hard is breaking us as individuals. It's time to recalibrate our priorities if we want to be here for the long game. To read the report: trends.uxdesign.cc/2023 Written by Fabricio Teixeira and Caio Braga. Published by the UX Collective. Narrated by Laura Vandiver.

Design Systems Podcast
41. Mike Bowser from Vista: The past, present, and future of design systems

Design Systems Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 8, 2022 27:04


Mike and Chris discuss design systems at the enterprise level, the history of systems, and UX design at the beginning of the internet. Guest: Mike Bowser is the Design Director, Design Systems at Vista. He is a UX/UI designer, design team leader, and educator with expertise in design systems, UX research, and UI design. His recent focus is closing the gap between how we concept and design and how products are actually built. He's also interested in the growing opportunities for automation in the future of UX design and design systems.You can find Mike on Twitter as @mikebowser and on LinkedIn.Huge thanks to Jeff Yaus, Emily Mills, and Sujeet Jaiswal from Vista, and Fabricio Teixeira and the team at Work&Co for their contributions to the Vista design language and design system.Host: Chris Strahl is co-founder and CEO of Knapsack, host of @TheDSPod, DnD DM, and occasional river guide. You can find Chris on Twitter as @chrisstrahl and on LinkedIn.Sponsor: Knapsack is a design system platform rooted in code for shipping consistent apps in half the time. Design once, build once, use everywhere. Learn more at knapsack.cloud.View the transcript for this episode.

UX Collective
The State of UX in 2022

UX Collective

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 24, 2021 13:19


The past two years have felt like two decades — and the pandemic isn't over yet. From rethinking remote work policies to acknowledging the unintended impact of the products we build, designers in 2022 have a unique opportunity to rebuild our practice with a new perspective, incorporating all we've learned since the start of the pandemic. Since we began publishing this yearly report eight years ago, we have challenged ourselves to discuss the design industry beyond visual and tech trends, taking an honest look at the things we need to improve as a field. After curating and sharing articles daily with more than 450k designers around the world, this year we wanted to focus on possibilities. This is the moment to recalibrate and reimagine what it means to be a designer, to design, and to be part of a design community. Are you ready to rebuild? Written by Fabricio Teixeira and Caio Braga. Published by the UX Collective. Narrated by Laura Vandiver.

published fabricio teixeira
ExPatria - Designers pelo mundo
Q&A UX Collective - Fabricio Teixeira, Caio Braga e Rafael Frota

ExPatria - Designers pelo mundo

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 16, 2021 61:13


Pela primeira vez, consegui reunir os fundadores da maior publicação de UX do mundo em uma entrevista ao vivo que aconteceu no Clubhouse. Nesse episódio eu converso com o Fabricio Teixeira, o Caio Braga e o Rafael Frota. Eles respondem perguntas do público que chegaram por texto ou intervenções diretas ao vivo, alguns exemplos: Porque não vemos eles com mais frequência em podcasts, vídeos... Qual o processo de envio de um artigo para o UX Collective Que tipos de assuntos eles gostariam de ver mais textos Projeto sem fins lucrativos, razões por trás dessa decisão Entre outros assuntos... Durante a entrevista, tivemos alguns exemplos de bons textos, seguem os links: UX Collective Brasil Publique um artigo Todos os motivos pelos quais eu sempre fui chamada de treteira no trabalho Template de avaliação de competências para Designers What is the real role of a design portfolio website? The case study factory The guide to design Não perca todos os outros episódios do ExPatria Você também pode assinar a minha newsletter - thedesignedition.substack.com Me siga no twitter - @all_lucca

Endo Voices
Trauma Update 2020 - Ep.018

Endo Voices

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 4, 2020 57:39


Past IADT President Dr. Nestor Cohenca and Dr. Fabricio Teixeira, chair of endodontics at the University of Iowa, delve into all things trauma in this in-depth discussion. New practices within regendo, bioceramics and other advanced technologies are all covered in this important update. Don’t miss it! Episodes of Endo Voices may include opinion, speculation and other statements not verifiable in the scientific method and do not necessarily reflect the views of AAE or the sponsor(s). Listeners should use their best judgment in evaluating the merits of any content. To learn more about the American Association of Endodontists, visit aae.org.

Carreira Tech
#Carreira Tech - EP04 - Juliana Lima - Ux Designer/UI Designer

Carreira Tech

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 14, 2020 51:38


No quarto vídeo do ano e do projeto #CarreiraTech, o nosso convidado é a primeira mulher a participar do projeto, eu trabalhei na mesma empresa que ela (em áreas diferentes) e fiquei maravilhado tanto com a participação bem como a experiência de carreira que a Juliana possui. Ela trabalha com UX Designer e nos traz sua visão sobre a área de UX no Brasil. Convido você a me ajudar a alcançar tantas pessoas que não sabem como começar sua carreia compartilhando este PodCast no seu Facebook, no seu Instagram, no seu Twitter e demais meios sociais :) com a hashtag #CarreiraTech e #UxDesigner. Te vejo nos comentários. Abraços. Siga a Juliana Lima no linkeDin: [ Linkedin: ] https://www.linkedin.com/in/juliana-lopes-lima/ [ Cursos que podem te ajudar: ] UI Design: Desing de Interfaces http://twixar.me/GjPK Curso de Photoshop http://twixar.me/gXPK Curso de PHP Developer http://twixar.me/8XPK O melhor guia para uso adequado de animação em UX http://twixar.me/7XPK Estude da forma correta http://twixar.me/MXPK [ Links Comentados no PodCast ] Linkedin: User Experience (UX) Design https://www.linkedin.com/groups/3209228/ https://somostera.com/cursos/user-exp... Bootcamp em SP dia 29/05 https://www.designerhangout.co/ hangout designer http://www.deardesigners.co/ comunidades http://sbdi.org.br/cidi2019/ Esse é o congresso que terá em BH/MG, as inscrições serão até dia 30/04. Metodologia Design Sprint da Google https://designsprintkit.withgoogle.co... https://www.casadocodigo.com.br/produ... Livro mencionado: Introdução e Boas praticas de UX Designer , de Fabricio Teixeira. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

Endo Voices
Dental Trauma Update - Ep. 7

Endo Voices

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 3, 2020 40:17


The phrase “less is more” is relevant to the area of dental trauma. University of Iowa Chair of Endodontics Dr. Fabricio Teixeira has uttered those words, expressing that sometimes it is best to “do less” when it comes to treating trauma cases. He joins us to discuss this topic in depth in the latest episode of Endo Voices. Episodes of Endo Voices may include opinion, speculation and other statements not verifiable in the scientific method and do not necessarily reflect the views of AAE or the sponsor(s). Listeners should use their best judgment in evaluating the merits of any content. To learn more about the American Association of Endodontists, visit aae.org.

Design Standup
#035: The Seven Stages of the Design Craft – and How to Get to the Next One by Fabricio Teixeira of UX Collective

Design Standup

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 30, 2019 9:05


Fabricio crafts a splendid breakdown of the 7 stages of design craft, highlighting the primary KPIs and action items to help you get to the next stage.   About the author: Fabricio Teixeira is a design director at Work & Co based in Brooklyn, NY. Founder of UX Collective. A big believer in user-centered design and knowledge sharing. Learn more about Fabricio at https://fabricio.work/.   Original post: http://bit.ly/2V59ICs    Blog: https://uxdesign.cc   Categories: #career #process   Follow Design Standup: LinkedIn Group: https://bit.ly/2RcyVYR Facebook: https://bit.ly/2PyzlrL Twitter: https://bit.ly/2QxsEvp Instagram: https://bit.ly/2Vmcdkv     Share:                     Subscribe & listen     ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️   Don't forget to rate & review the show!     CC music courtesy of Freesound  

Design Standup
#024: Why Are You Not Designing Your Day-To-Day Experience AND The What → How → Why Cycle of Every New Technology Wave by Fabricio Teixeira of UX Collective

Design Standup

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 21, 2019 11:33


Fabricio of UX Collective highlights the importance of owning your own daily experiences, and the normal lifecycle that every new technology product goes through.   About the author: Fabricio Teixeira is a design director at Work & Co based in Brooklyn, NY. Founder of UX Collective. A big believer in user-centered design and knowledge sharing. Learn more about Fabricio at https://fabricio.work/.    Original posts: https://bit.ly/2RJGPcL  https://bit.ly/2NpsDVA   Blog: https://uxdesign.cc   Categories: #ux #process #career #tech    Follow Design Standup: LinkedIn Group: https://bit.ly/2RcyVYR Facebook: https://bit.ly/2PyzlrL Twitter: https://bit.ly/2QxsEvp Instagram: https://bit.ly/2Vmcdkv     Share:                     Subscribe & listen     ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️   Don't forget to rate & review the show!     CC music courtesy of Freesound  

The Informed Life
Fabricio Teixeira on Publishing

The Informed Life

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 17, 2019 31:13 Transcription Available


My guest today is Fabricio Teixeira. Fabricio has led design teams at various agencies over the past 15 years; now he's at Work & Co, a digital product design studio based in Brooklyn, NY. I came to know Fabricio because he's one of the founders and publishers of UX Collective, one of the largest design and UX online publications. In this episode, we focus on how Fabricio and his partner Caio Braga make UX Collective happen through mindful information management. Listen to the full conversation https://theinformeddotlife.files.wordpress.com/2019/02/episode-3-fabricio-teixeira.mp3   Show notes Fabricio Teixeira UX Collective Work & Co Feedly Digg Reader (sadly, no longer available) Pocket Buffer If This Then That Getting Things Done Gmail Gmail canned responses Google Sheets Google Tasks Read the full transcript Fabricio: I'm a designer. I've been working on the agency side of things for the last 15 years. I started back in Brazil. Moved to the US, I think, 10 years ago. Lived in Miami New York, San Francisco, and I'm now based in Brooklyn. And as a designer, I'm a more focused on the systematic/functional side of things. And I've always been a maniac when it comes to information organization. So when I heard about your podcast, I was like “this is this is amazing!” I started out as an information architect back in the day, you know, that was a cool name at the time. And to me felt like it was a perfect calling in a way. I've always liked both kind of arts and science, and that whole universe of IA was the best of two worlds for me. So it's kind of bringing it all together. Jorge: I first got to know about you because you are one of the two founders of a publication that has had a lot of visibility online about UX design, right? Fabricio: That's right, UX Collective. Jorge: I had seen your site, and it was very memorable because it used images of polar bears — which I'm very drawn to — and also a very distinctive light blue color. And yeah, so it's very it's got this branding that is very recognizable. And I remember I posted an article on Medium, and you all reached out and asked me to include it in the publication. And that's how I came to be… Well, I had been aware of it before — I recognized it immediately because of the branding — but that's how I came to be more in the loop here. So I'm curious about UX Collective. How does it work? Fabricio: Sure. So we started UX Collective, I think, twelve years ago. Even more, maybe. When I was starting in UX, and I was learning about the topic, there wasn't a lot of information available in Portuguese at the time — my native language — so I had to learn English to be able to read the blogs that were out there like Boxes and Arrows and A List Apart and all that great stuff. And then I started using my blog as a way to translate what I was learning to my fellow Brazilian designers. So it started really as a tool to document some of the things that I was learning through that journey and then, fast forward a couple years, I was doing that more and more often. I was doing that in English now, and Medium came about and suddenly we became the largest design publication on Medium. So you can imagine how much effort that itself takes, to manage a publication. And the goal for UX Collective has always been giving back to the community some of the content that is available online, right? There's a lot of content online, but at the same time that creates a little bit of noise for designers that are starting in the field. So it's a way for us to curate everything that's going on and give back to the community in a more digestible way, I guess. Jorge: Yeah, it's a service that you provide. Right? Fabricio: Right. Yeah. Jorge: So you talked about a few things there that I'm very intrigued by. One was the fact that the original intent behind UX Collective was to bring to the Brazilian community the stuff that was happening elsewhere in the world. Is that right? Fabricio: That's right. Yeah, Jorge: So there was a point where you switched over to English. And you said that you are the largest design publication in Medium and I'm guessing that that would not be the case if it had stayed as a Portuguese publication. So I'm curious about that decision to switch to English. How did it come about? Fabricio: I think it was part of my journey as a designer, right? I moved to the US and English suddenly became my primary language, and all the vocabulary that I was getting and learning and developing as I was working in design was in English. So it felt like almost like a natural process to start shifting to English. We still publish articles in Portuguese as well. I haven't stopped doing that. But it's interesting how English has become my primary professional language while Portuguese is still my primary personal language in a way. Jorge: You live in New York. Do you engage day-to-day with a lot of people in Portuguese? Fabricio: Yeah, there are some Brazilians in our office at Work & Co. So, I get to talk Portuguese at least a little bit every day. But usually the topics we talk about are not exactly work-related, right? Versus English, which is a language I'm using for everything design-related. Jorge: Right. I'm asking you these questions because I'm curious — for obvious reasons, I think — English is also not my native language. And I'm in a very similar situation to you in that I moved to the US and English became my primary language. You talk about this distinction between work and personal stuff, and in the design field, especially, there's a lot of terminology that doesn't easily translate, right? Fabricio: True. Jorge: How do you choose which articles go in Portuguese and which go in English? Fabricio: That's a really good question. All articles work in English, at least they work well for me in English, and then I pick the ones that make more sense to translate to Portuguese based on kind of the zeitgeist of the Brazilian design community and the discussions that I see happening in the level of maturity of the Brazilian industry. So it's kind of a curation in a way as well picking the ones that I think makes sense to translate. There are some things that are maybe too technical or that talk about a certain technology that it's not as popular in Brazil as it is, you know here in the US. So yeah, I follow I usually follow my instincts to decide what to translate, I guess. Jorge: Is it just you or do you have a team working with you? Fabricio: I have a partner, Caio. Also Brazilian. We split our responsibilities on the blog. Jorge: And are you doing the translation yourselves or do you have folks helping with that? Fabricio: No, we are. I'm writing at least one article a week in Portuguese. Jorge: Well, that's amazing. Kudos! So I'm curious… you're running a publication, right? And having been a part of the process from the authoring side, I know that you and Caio have ways of managing this publication and keeping track of what gets published when, I'm guessing. Right? Some kind of editorial schedule? I was hoping that you could tell us about that about the systems and structures that you have in place to help you manage the publication. Fabricio: Yeah, of course. So just for context: It's a lot of stuff; it's a lot of content. We have the Medium publication where we publish I guess around five or six articles every day and to get to those five articles. I have to read through, you know, 15-20 articles every day to decide what gets published. We also have a newsletter that we send every week with the best links of the week. We have our trend report that we launch at the end of the year. We have mentorship sessions that we offer we have to manage our social accounts; Twitter and Linkedin and Facebook. So it's a lot of effort and the interesting part is I have a full-time job. This my side project; my hobby. but I also have a full-time job. I'm a design director at Work & Co. which is a product design studio in Brooklyn. So it's challenging to manage it all at the same time. And the way I like to think about how to manage information, I think there's a term that's stuck in my head right now… information diet, right? I think I read about it on your blog the first time, and since then I really started paying attention, you know to pay more attention to it. It's so important today, being able to manage how much information you consume every day, the same way one would limit their red meat consumption. It's like it's really essential and I feel like. As consumers not only as a blog editor or as a writer. We have reached a point where we are consuming more information every single day than our brains are able to process, you know. We're scrolling through feeds, we're getting hundreds of emails, and we're being stimulated by video audio and notifications. And there's a lot going on, so that certainly starts to affect our overall well-being as humans. So I'm really mindful of balancing my own information diet and especially having the blog and having my full-time job and being exposed to a lot of information every day, the way I try to organize myself when it comes to managing that amount of information. I try to think about it in three different levels. First, it's the intake piece. Right? What's the right of right amount of information to consume and from which sources? This layer is really about preventing the wrong content or distractions from getting to me the first place. I when I say “wrong,” I mean unhelpful content. Then there is like, “cool, the content got to me.” And then there's a second layer of, “how do I organize that content with the information that I do need and that I do want to receive every day?” Which is still a lot. How can I organize myself to distribute that information throughout my day, my week, in different mindsets I'm in. So that's the second layer. And then there's a third layer of, “cool, I have a lot of stuff that I have to put out: tweets and posts and emails.” And so how do I create efficiencies? How do I automate my workflow as much as possible to be able to keep up with all this all these side projects at the same time. So yeah, that's how my brain kind of breaks down that challenge: intake, organization, and then automation. And then of coursem for each of these layers, I have specific tools that I use and specific mechanisms that have been successful or not as successful. Jorge: That's fantastic. It's a really clear way of thinking about it. Can you share with us one tool each for these layers? The ones that you feel are most important? Fabricio: Yeah. The first one is the intake of information. So this is really about curation tools. You're probably similar to me Jorge, but I've been building an RSS feed. I don't know if you use Google Reader… not Google Reader, but Feedly, or Digg Reader, or one of those RSS services. So I've been building that list over the years. That's my primary source of information. Every time I find a reliable blog or site or something, I add that feed to my to my reader. And then I try to balance that with Twitter, which adds to that serendipity aspect of, “let's just follow a few random folks here and see what they're up to you and see what they're talking about.” That way, I'm balancing heavy reading and design-related content versus random topics like culture and politics that people are talking about on Twitter. One thing I try to do — kind of a hack that I that I've been doing the last couple years — is just to silence my phone as much as possible. Sometimes it's not about too much information, but it's about information trying to get to you too many times throughout the day, if that makes sense. I think five years ago I redesigned my phone experience to turn off all notifications except for one or two apps, removed the number of icons that I have on my home screen so there's not a lot of visual clutter and information every time I unlock my phone. Removing all those red badges from the app icon, so there's no anxiety or tapping them and opening them. So in a way, it's almost like I designed my technology experience so that it doesn't get in the way of the actual information I want to get access to, if that makes any sense. Jorge: It sounds like you're configuring your environment so that you can be more in control of your attention, right? Fabricio: That's right. Yeah, and that's not only around technology. Of course, technology plays an important role there, but being mindful of my surroundings… I always try to keep the books from authors that I admire next to my desk. So I'm always surrounded by that feeling of… It's hard to describe, but even my apartment walls are a hundred percent white; there's no paintings or anything. My desk has as few objects as possible. As a designer, I'm making sure that I'm designing the space around me to avoid too much cognitive load throughout the day. Jorge: The degree to which our environments and the busyness of the environment impinges upon your ability to be effective. Right? Fabricio: It's really hard to measure. It's not a quantity, right? It's hard to measure the return over investment over those things because ultimately it's really qualitative. It's really about feeling lighter at the end of the day. I guess that's my KPI, ultimately. Jorge: I'm wanting to dig a little bit more into the inputs through RSS and Twitter. That sounds very similar to the way that I get my information. And it can be a fire hose, right? Even with RSS like you said. Well, you see something interesting you have to feed to your RSS. There comes a point where there's a lot coming through; I'm wondering what the mechanics are behind saying, “this is one that I need to follow up on.” How do you keep track of that? Fabricio: I usually pick the ones that I'm not going to find… the type of content that I'm not going to find anywhere else, right? Because there's tech news and there's design news. If you open ten different blogs, they're all going to be talking about the same thing. Right? So I know that eventually, I'm going to stumble upon that news or someone going to talk about the latest iPhone or the latest design tool at work or in other places. So I try to curate my feeds to the sources to the type of content. I'm not going to find anywhere else and then what I do is every time I feel that. Oh, there's that's too much content because I'm the feed zero inbox zero type of person. I like to go through everything that I have, but it starts to get overwhelming at some point. So every end of the year, I stop and look back at my feed. I do that across the board. I look at my wardrobe, and I donate things that I'm not using; not wearing. But I also do that on my feeds. I look at my feeds, and I'm like, “well, I haven't really gotten anything super relevant from this blog or from this website.” So once a year I make sure I clean up my sources, so I'm not spending too much time on Feedly every day. Jorge: You publish on UX Collective an end-of-year review of the UX design field that spots patterns and tries to surface the things that you are seeing as being worthy of our attention. And this is getting into your second step which has to do with organizing content. Right? I'm curious how you take that fire hose of content and then start spotting patterns that you will then raise to our attention through UX Collective. Fabricio: Yeah. So for that second layer, I feel like I have too many tools and hacks that I use some of them are pretty embarrassing. So maybe I'll share the most important ones. So I use a lot of Gmail labels to be able to control all the information that gets to me all the emails and messages that I get. I also use Pocket, the Chrome extension, to save the most exciting and interesting articles. And then I have a whole tagging system. If I tag a certain article as newsletter, it then saves that article to a Google spreadsheet that I can open every weekend to curate the links that I'm going to include in my weekly newsletter. If I tag an article — I forgot the specific tag — but it's almost like if each different tag drives that article to a different workflow. If I tag an article “Twitter,” it automatically schedules a tweet with that link using Buffer, which is another management tool that I have. So I've built a system around how to navigate that information and all those links. And then at the end of the year, there's also a tag for that. Usually, Caio and I go back to our bookmarks and to what we feel were the most relevant topics that year, and then we start trying to find patterns: “Okay, what are the 10 biggest topics that the UI and design community talked about this year?” So there's a lot of automation and tools going on. Jorge: To be clear, you are doing the tagging in Pocket. Is that right? Fabricio: I am. So I'm saving all the links in Pocket. I'm tagging in Pocket. Then I'm setting up some If This Then That bots to then connect those Pocket links to other services that I use like Buffer, Google Drive, Dropbox, Google Tasks, right? But everything starts from Pocket. Jorge: Yeah, it sounds like Pocket is the collection bucket where everything goes in. Fabricio: Yeah. Jorge: Are you doing the tagging the moment that you save the link, or do you go back? Fabricio: I read an article and I'm like, “well, this would be a good tweet,” so I tag “tweet.” “This would be a great fit for the newsletter,” so I tag “newsletter,” right? So my brain is processing, knowing all the different contexts in which that article, post, whatever can be used. My brain is kind of making the… Almost like the mental mapping of where this could go. Jorge: You mentioned Google Tasks in there, what role does Google Tasks play? Fabricio: Oh, it's embarrassing. It's my brain. It's where I put all my to-do items. Like everything that I have to do, I save there, which is interesting. I mean, it's going to be silly, but even like getting a haircut is there every two weeks, three weeks. It's about habit-forming. So now I have this instinct that every time I think, “oh, yeah, I have to do that!,” my brain immediately connects to Google Tasks. So I open Google Tasks, and I write down whatever I have to do there. And then I can pick a specific date or due date, or I can make it recurring or not recurring. That's where I outsource a lot of my brain power my memory power, especially. Jorge: I don't think it's embarrassing at all. In fact, I think it corresponds to the drive you were describing earlier to create a physical environment that respects your attention. Fabricio: That's right. Jorge: Are you familiar with the work of David Allen? Fabricio: I'm not, no. Jorge: Getting Things Done? Fabricio: Oh, okay. I've seen something. Jorge: So in the Getting Things Done methodology or approach one of the things that Mr. Allen talks about is getting the tasks that you have to do out of your head and onto lists. Fabricio: Yeah. Jorge: And he uses this martial arts metaphor. He says, you want to have “mind like water” — where your mind is still, right? And you're not troubled by all this stuff rattling around in your head. And I think that that's a similar drive to what you were describing with the white walls in your apartment. Fabricio: Yeah, that's exactly right. Yeah. It's about having peace of mind so that I can focus on the right things throughout the day. Jorge: Great. So there's a third layer to this which is sharing the information back. And I'm particularly curious about how you and Caio collaborate on things like that end-of-year report. Fabricio: Yeah, not only the report, but also we get like 25 or 30 emails every day from authors; Medium writers submitting or pitching an article idea for UX Collective. So, that itself is a lot of work, and I'm so thankful to Caio for helping me manage that. We have a shared email address that is the blog's email address, and we are CC'ed on every exchange so we know the emails that the other person has responded or not. That helps a lot. We also have Gmail response template. I think they're called “canned responses” and that helps a lot, right? Because we have a response for, “Great, your article is approved! Here are the next steps.” We have a template for, “Well this article is not a good fit for reasons X, Y, & Z.” So there's a bunch of different templates we've created over the years, and that helps a lot because it takes away 95% of the work so we can focus on the more custom messages and the more custom article editing for specific articles. And then, the other tool in the third layer of putting content out that I use a lot is Buffer. I think I mentioned it briefly. It's this social media scheduling tool. I have my Twitter, I have the blog's Twitter, I have LinkedIn and Facebook and all the different social channels that I'm posting every day. But at the same time, I have a full-time job to keep up with, so I'm essentially pre-scheduling all the posts once a week, usually over the weekend. And then what it does is that it randomizes the times where it tweets something or where we post to LinkedIn something, and that helps a lot. Jorge: It sounds like you have built yourself a system that allows two people to really do a lot, right? Fabricio: Yeah. Jorge: What about the writing itself? Are you doing that directly on Medium or does it start somewhere else? Fabricio: That's usually on Medium. Yeah. I haven't found a way to automate that piece. So this is about really blocking some time, usually every Saturday morning for two or three hours. Sitting down with a good cup of coffee in silence and just writing. I usually use Medium for that because I love the interface and how simple it is. I'm usually writing two articles every week. Jorge: I'm tremendously impressed by the system that you have described, and I'm wondering what aspects of it are not working as well as you would like. Can you tell us about a time when the system failed? Fabricio: It fails quite often, but it's never a big fail. There are a couple of instances where maybe Caio and I respond to the same email because we forgot to CC our shared email address. There are little things like that. But it's not a problem because both of us are usually very aligned in terms of our editorial guidelines. So it's usually the same response that we sent to the author. Stepping back a little bit, what I consider a fail in this whole system is when I feel like I'm using too much time to do something that I could be automating more. This whole system is created around giving myself time. I feel like time is our most precious resource. It's not money; it's time. So, every couple of months I have this feeling that “oh my God, I'm spending like one hour every day to manage the blog. That's a lot of time!” You know, I want to use this time to spend with my family, with my friends, or just keeping my brain idle, or play video games, or whatever. So that's why I feel like the system is failing me: when all these tools and mechanisms are starting to take too much time. So then, when I see that's happening, what I usually do is I start to rethink how I'm spending each hour of my day. Take a look at my daily and weekly tasks to see if there's any opportunity to automate some of that work. Take a look at all at all the initiatives and all the commitments that I have running in parallel or the side projects to see if there's anything I need to stop doing. And that's usually when the cost-benefit is not as great as you used to be when I started that project. So I feel like every three to six months that's system starts to fail and then I have to take action to quickly recover from there. Jorge: Thank you so much, Fabricio. I think this is a good place to end it: on time. I am thankful for yours — for having shared your time with us. I'm very impressed and congratulate you on what you and Caio have built. Fabricio: Thank you for inviting me. And congratulations to you as well. I'm impressed with how you're able to keep up with your blog and how you're able to put out at least an article every day. I'm a big fan; a big follower. So here's a suggestion: you should do an episode talking about your own tools as well. Jorge: Interesting. We might do another one where we turn the tables. That will come in the future sometime. So tell the folks where they can find you and read more about your work. Fabricio: It's essentially at the UX Collective; that URL is uxdesign.cc. And our main project right now is our newsletter that we send out every week and you can access that on newsletter.uxdesign.cc. Jorge: Thank you so Fabricio, this has been great.

Design Standup
#009: [Part 3] The State of UX in 2019 by Fabricio Teixeira and Caio Braga of UX Collective

Design Standup

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 29, 2019 10:47


Fabricio and Caio highlight the current landscape of the UX industry, from the tools we use, the methods we apply every day, the technologies we design around, and much more.   About the authors: Fabricio Teixeira is a design director at Work & Co based in Brooklyn, NY. Founder of UX Collective. A big believer in user-centered design and knowledge sharing. Learn more about Fabricio at https://uxdesign.cc/@fabriciot. Caio Braga is a UX designer & editor at https://uxdesign.cc. Learn more about Caio at https://medium.com/@caioab.   Original post: https://trends.uxdesign.cc/   Blog: https://uxdesign.cc   Categories: #ux #ui #career #process #motion #tools   Follow Design Standup: LinkedIn Group: https://bit.ly/2RcyVYR Facebook: https://bit.ly/2PyzlrL Twitter: https://bit.ly/2QxsEvp Instagram: https://bit.ly/2Vmcdkv     Share:                     Subscribe & listen     ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️   Don't forget to rate & review the show!     CC music courtesy of Freesound  

Design Standup
#008: [Part 2] The State of UX in 2019 by Fabricio Teixeira and Caio Braga of UX Collective

Design Standup

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 24, 2019 12:57


Fabricio and Caio highlight the current landscape of the UX industry, from the tools we use, the methods we apply every day, the technologies we design around, and much more.   About the authors: Fabricio Teixeira is a design director at Work & Co based in Brooklyn, NY. Founder of UX Collective. A big believer in user-centered design and knowledge sharing. Learn more about Fabricio at https://uxdesign.cc/@fabriciot. Caio Braga is a UX designer & editor at https://uxdesign.cc. Learn more about Caio at https://medium.com/@caioab.   Original post: https://trends.uxdesign.cc/   Blog: https://uxdesign.cc   Categories: #ux #ui #career #process #motion #tools   Follow Design Standup: LinkedIn Group: https://bit.ly/2RcyVYR Facebook: https://bit.ly/2PyzlrL Twitter: https://bit.ly/2QxsEvp Instagram: https://bit.ly/2Vmcdkv     Share:                     Subscribe & listen     ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️   Don't forget to rate & review the show!     CC music courtesy of Freesound  

Design Standup
#007: [Part 1] The State of UX in 2019 by Fabricio Teixeira and Caio Braga of UX Collective

Design Standup

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 22, 2019 13:47


Fabricio and Caio highlight the current landscape of the UX industry, from the tools we use, the methods we apply every day, the technologies we design around, and much more.   About the authors: Fabricio Teixeira is a design director at Work & Co based in Brooklyn, NY. Founder of UX Collective. A big believer in user-centered design and knowledge sharing. Learn more about Fabricio at https://uxdesign.cc/@fabriciot. Caio Braga is a UX designer & editor at https://uxdesign.cc. Learn more about Caio at https://medium.com/@caioab.   Original post: https://trends.uxdesign.cc/   Blog: https://uxdesign.cc   Categories: #ux #ui #career #process #motion #tools   Follow Design Standup: LinkedIn Group: https://bit.ly/2RcyVYR Facebook: https://bit.ly/2PyzlrL Twitter: https://bit.ly/2QxsEvp Instagram: https://bit.ly/2Vmcdkv     Share:                     Subscribe & listen     ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️   Don't forget to rate & review the show!     CC music courtesy of Freesound  

Design Standup
#001: Design is About Getting Through the Finish Line AND You Don't Need to Know Everything About UX by Fabricio Teixeira of UX Collective

Design Standup

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 1, 2019 7:31


Fabricio makes some great points on following through with your design work, and also easing your anxiety about trying to know everything in the UX field.   About the author: Fabricio Teixeira is a design director at Work & Co based in Brooklyn, NY. Founder of UX Collective. A big believer in user-centered design and knowledge sharing. Learn more about Fabricio at https://uxdesign.cc/@fabriciot.   Slack channels: #ux #career    Follow Design Standup: LinkedIn Group: https://bit.ly/2RcyVYR Facebook: https://bit.ly/2PyzlrL Twitter: https://bit.ly/2QxsEvp Instagram: https://bit.ly/2Vmcdkv     Share:                     Subscribe & listen     ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️   Don't forget to rate & review the show!     CC music courtesy of Freesound  

Mulheres de Produto
#09 Priscila Sonnesso / UX, aprendizagem e freelancing / MdP

Mulheres de Produto

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 21, 2018 38:02


Neste episódio falamos com a Priscila Sonnesso, que é UX na Avanade, co-fundadora de Pineappless Lab, instrutora de Usabilidade na Caelum e ainda faz muitas coisas por aí. Ela compartilhou dicas de como conseguir um primeiro emprego ou trabalhos freelancer mesmo sem experiência na área e também contou como conseguiu superar sua timidez e medo que a seguravam no que sempre queria fazer. Escute agora :) Neste ep mencionamos: Empresas com UX extraordinário para se inspirar: Avanade https://www.avanade.com/pt-br Tropikal http://tropikal.co/ Fjord https://www.fjordnet.com/ Concrete Solutions https://www.concrete.com.br/ Try http://try.com.br/ Saiba + http://www.saiba-mais.com/ Thoughtworks https://www.thoughtworks.com/pt Conta Azul https://medium.com/design-contaazul We Work https://www.wework.com/pt-BR/ Ticket https://www.ticket.com.br/ Uol https://www.uol.com.br/ Superlógica labs https://labs.superlogica.com/ IDEO https://www.ideo.com/ Cursos, instituições e conteúdo para aprender sobre UX: UX Collective https://uxdesign.cc/ (em inglês) ou em português https://brasil.uxdesign.cc/ Cursos de UX na Udemy https://www.udemy.com/courses/search/?src=ukw&q=ux Cursos de UX na Alura https://www.alura.com.br/cursos-online-design-ux Interaction Foundation https://www.interaction-design.org/ Caelum https://www.caelum.com.br/ Mergo http://www.mergo.com.br/ Tera https://somostera.com/ Mastertech https://mastertech.com.br/ ESPM https://www.espm.br/ PUC https://www.pucsp.br/pos-graduacao/especializacao-e-mba/ux-digital-experiencia-do-usuario-em-plataformas-digitais Pessoas da área para seguir: Fabricio Teixeira - o “pai” do UX no Brasil :) https://fabricio.work/ Carla de Bona http://carladebona.com/ Bruno Canato http://www.brunocanato.com/ Claudia Mardegan https://www.linkedin.com/in/claudiamardegan Rogério Pereira https://www.linkedin.com/in/rog%C3%A9rio-pereira-b6128710/ Euripedes Magalhães https://www.linkedin.com/in/euripedesm/ Denis Piaia https://www.linkedin.com/in/denispiaia/ Natan Souza https://www.linkedin.com/in/designernatan/ Carolina Leslie https://www.linkedin.com/in/lulileslie/ Lu Terceiro https://www.linkedin.com/in/luterceiro/ Redes sociais da convidada: LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/in/priscilasonnesso/ Twitter https://twitter.com/pri_sonnesso

Beyond Users
13- Fabricio Teixeira @UX Collective - How to develop your business empathy

Beyond Users

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 1, 2018 45:13


Fabricio Teixeira is a design director at the digital product agency Work & Co and the founder of the UX Collective, one of the best resources for blog posts, links, and resources for UX designers. In The State of UX in 2018 report, UX Collective editors wrote that "The UX designers of 2018 will need to understand more about business". So, I reached out to Fabricio to learn more about the backstory of this statement and how did his path to becoming more business-savvy look like. In this episode we spoke about: the simple exercise UX designers can use to start building their business muscle, how sharing knowledge is the best way to learn and advance the career,  and how can we recognize future trends in the UX community?  Show notes: 2:20 How did Fabricio get into design?  6:20 How Fabricio teaches UX design through simplification 10:30 How and why Fabricio started UX Collective 12:50 How sharing knowledge is the best way to learn  17:05 How to recognize big trends and important patterns in the UX community?  19:35 Why is learning about business important for designers 24:35 How did Fabricio learn business 27:25 The exercise Fabricio uses with his team to develop business empathy  35:05 The question that uncovers business goals behind a design project

ExPatria - Designers pelo mundo
Inovação vs adaptação no mercado Brasileiro, com Fabricio Teixeira

ExPatria - Designers pelo mundo

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 10, 2018 39:12


Seguindo o novo formato do podcast onde temos uma conversa mais ampla sobre o nosso mercado, discuti com o Fabricio Teixeira o mercado brasileiro de design, desde o grande numero de designers deixando o país, pelos mais variados motivos, como por exemplo o simples investimento em carreira ou qualidade de vida, ponto que apareceu bastante nas outras conversas que tive. Foi natural então, questionarmos as diferenças no ambiente geral, desde a economia até os nuances culturais que afetam a nossa industria, deixando pouco espaço para inovação real e de consequência um foco maior na adaptação de produtos já validados no exterior. Aproveitando as experiências passadas do Fabricio, eu perguntei se ele acha possível criar produtos de qualidade em ambientes de agência, e uma curiosidade pessoal minha que era saber como ele faz para criar e gerenciar tanto conteúdo assim. LINKS: https://uxdesign.cc

Hipsters Ponto Tech
Vida de Agência – Hipsters #02

Hipsters Ponto Tech

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 25, 2016 39:03


E quem vive de tecnologia já trabalhou ou ouviu falar: agências de publicidade. O que antes parecia ser um trabalho para criar comerciais de TV se tornou uma oportunidade de exercer a criatividade ao máximo: juntando publicidade, design e software as agências se reinventaram e criam campanhas que vão da web ao mundo real. Conversamos com Fabricio Teixeira, líder de UX na RGA de São Francisco e Anderson Leite, engenheiro de software na mesma agência. Eles contam sobre o dia a dia de uma agência e suas experiências em projetos na Nike, Google, entre outros. Fichinha da biblioteca: Participantes Paulo Silveira, host do hipsters Anderson Leite, engenheiro de software na RGA São Francisco Fabricio Teixeira, líder de UX na RGA São Francisco Alguns links citados: FWA projeto do dia Awwwards, um site por dia Chrome Panda, para fazer você procrastinar ainda mais o seu trabalho! Siteinspire Web Design Arquitetura de Informação - blog organizado pelo Fabricio Teixeira Produção e conteúdo: Alura Cursos online de Tecnologia - https://www.alura.com.br === Caelum Ensino e Inovação Edição e sonorização: Radiofobia Podcast e Multimídia Participe do nosso grupo no Facebook, deixando ideias de pautas, links interessantes e mais! Aproveita para comentar aqui no post!

Movimento UX
UX em agências com Fabricio Teixeira - Episódio 05

Movimento UX

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 10, 2016 62:19


No 5º episódio do Movimento UX, eu conversei com o Fabricio Teixeira que é diretor de Experiência do Usuário na R/GA em São Francisco e curador do blog Arquitetura de Informação. Você pode saber mais sobre o trabalho do Fabricio aqui: http://fabricio.nu As dicas do Fabricio são: A List Apart http://alistapart.com Nielsen Norman Group: UX Training, Consulting, & Research https://www.nngroup.com UX Magazine https://uxmag.com UX Booth www.uxbooth.com Smashing Magazine https://www.smashingmagazine.com Se você gostou desse episódio, conte pro Fabricio e pra mim pelo Twitter: https://twitter.com/fabriciot https://twitter.com/izabeladefatima :D Se você quiser receber os próximos podcasts assim que forem lançados, junte-se à lista de e-mail do Movimento UX: http://bit.ly/EmailMUX . São só dois emails por mês e você não perde nenhum conteúdo. ;)