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Stories by Googlers on the people, product, and practice of UX at Google. For editorial content and more visit design.google

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What I Have Learned at Google as a Designer

Hardik Pandya
Google Design
Published in
15 min readApr 25, 2018

Most aversion from designers, when faced with critical feedback, comes due to the amount of effort it takes to make large-scale fundamental changes to designs in advanced stages of a project.

Design discussions start manifesting into decisions as you form these connections [between design interactions and real-life user situations] that are grounded in user’s reality.

The closer you get to the day of the meeting without booking a time, the harder it is to book as people’s calendars have been already filled up.

One time I remember while walking in Kyoto I was thinking about pointers that can help scheduling meetings with a person efficient and interesting and wanted to note down the stream of thoughts. I ended up spending 45 mins in a nearby cafe to finish jotting down my thoughts in a note.

You can accelerate learning but you cannot accelerate exposure. It will take its own time.

Good teams always leave an information trail for current and future team-members. Seek it out and read as much as possible.

As they say, most advice people give is almost always more of a note to their own self.

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Google Design
Google Design

Published in Google Design

Stories by Googlers on the people, product, and practice of UX at Google. For editorial content and more visit design.google

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