Career Skills Hub

Responsibilities and Skills For every Job Role

UX Designer

As a UX Designer, your role is to bridge the gap between user needs and product functionality. Here are the key tasks you’ll handle:

  • Communicate design concepts clearly to both internal and external stakeholders
  • Plan and conduct user research through surveys, focus groups, and interviews
  • Translate user requirements into seamless, intuitive UX flows within business applications
  • Create UX artifacts like user personas, user flow maps, sitemaps, wireframes, and prototypes (low- and high-fidelity)
  • Ensure designs follow UX best practices and align with usability standards
  • Collaborate closely with developers to finalize front-end requirements
  • Design responsive and cross-browser compatible interfaces for various devices
  • Conduct user testing (e.g., usability testing, A/B tests) and apply insights to improve design and features

A solid foundation in design principles, tools, and technologies is essential for UX success:

  • Strong understanding of UX principles, information architecture, and user-centered design
  • Proficiency in prototyping and wireframing tools:
    • Figma, Sketch, InVision, Adobe XD, Photoshop, Illustrator, Axure
  • Front-end basics:
    • HTML5, CSS, JavaScript, jQuery, Responsive Design (e.g., Bootstrap)

Bonus Skills (Nice to Have)

  • Familiarity with modern JS frameworks:
    • Angular, React, Vue.js, AJAX, JSON, WebSockets
  • Experience in responsive UI development and cross-platform performance optimization
  • Knowledge of Agile Scrum, Git, Jira, and other collaboration tools
  • Awareness of current web design and development trends

UX Designers must combine technical know-how with human-centered thinking. Key soft skills include:

  • Effective communication – for collaborating with teams and explaining design choices
  • Attention to detail – ensuring polished and high-quality outputs
  • Analytical thinking – to interpret user data and usability feedback
  • Empathy – putting yourself in the users’ shoes
  • Observation and noticing – identifying subtle usability issues
  • Teamwork – collaborating seamlessly across cross-functional teams