![]() ![]() Why I like it, because their have an actual job replacement report that detailed their 2019 placement data and u get a sense of transparency. Of all the providers, I really set on Flatiron school, but unfortunately their UX/UI bootcamp program is suspended due to Covid-19. I spoke to reps from 3 different providers and have questioned them on various topics, that's something you should do. Hi, have you use and to compare the various bootcamp providers? While both are not to be trusted 100%, but most providers have many reviews and I have been going through the ones I am interested in.Īs for myself, I am also looking to transitioning to UX/UI design role, but my path is coming from 15+ years of web/Interactive development background (8+ years of Flash actionscript progamming and 8+ years in HTML5/CSS/JS). my portfolio and interview answers would be terrible if I didn't. ![]() It'll offer flexibility and a tangible portfolio. Not sure what you're current job situation is like, but self-learning UX and freelancing could be a great start. ![]() Companies want to hear about your billion dollar freelance clients, not your class project from college. I'm not saying you can't get a UX job with just concept pieces, but it will make things easier if you have real-life products in your portfolio. Something to keep in mind when creating a portfolio. not just brainstorming and designing great experiences for fun. UX is all about finding solutions, increasing conversions for businesses, finding the fine lines between clients and users, etc. Concept pieces are interesting, but not tangible or usable. One huge aspect to interviews is the people interviewing you want to hear about UX work that's been in the hands of users, post development. ![]()
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