Sunday, January 5, 2020

How You Can Put Yourself on a New Career Path

How You Can Put Yourself on a New Career Path Article by Aliya MarderNobody wants to second-guess their career choices yet there I welches, in my first real UX role designing the interface for a mobile game, wondering whether Id made the right call.My worry? The flat visual mockups and addictive user flows that I welches working on delivered value for the company, not necessarily the user. When it came time to make strategic decisions about the gamers experience, I didnt have a seat at the table.To secure that seat, I decided to try engineering. Id enjoyed learning code, and the developers I knew had authority and ownership in a way that their design peers at the time, myself included, didnt have.So I took a job as a part-time UX designer. The product leader who hired me an engineer himself and also an amazing person agreed to help me improve my development skills by working on the code base on my days off.I loved it. At first, I thought it was jus t learning a new skill. Then, I noticed something My design and strategy muscles were being flexed as well. Id become the customers voice on my team. Id taken part in important decisions not just about the product, but also about the company itself.Thats when it hit me I wanted all three skill sets because they made me a better team member and a stronger leader. It took me years to discover it, but I was looking for the balance of community, creativity, and individual challenge that only a hybrid role could provide.Experimenting to Find Your FutureA little of everything isnt a career option that Id considered in school. Although I didnt realize it at the time, I discovered my path by applying experiment-driven design to my career1. Discover Your Ws Who, Where, and WhyI dont believe that anyone is born to do a certain job. Lets say, for example, that you thrive on solving a single hard problem and I prefer to jump between ideas. If each of us found a supportive environment, wed make equally good engineers or designers.Initially, I discovered UX design by talking with a friend. His startup was looking for a UX designer, but Id never even heard of it. He described a role that sounded amazing talking to people, solving problems, and being thoughtful and creative. I didnt have the skills to commit then and there, but I did realize that I deeply valued that sort of work.Whether you know what you want to pursue or just have an inkling, ask yourself why. Put pen to paper, and write freely for five minutes. Review your list, and keep asking yourself why. Do the exercise again and again until you feel like you have nothing more to give. Youll feel a sense of deep satisfaction once youve uncovered the reasons behind your inclination your dem tode nah values. Once youve discovered those, you can carve a path that lets you feed them.2. Experiment Through PlayI like to play a game I call Design Improvements in the Wild. As Im going about my daily life reading magazines, gr ocery shopping, whatever it may be I look for kerning errors, bad copy, silly Photoshop mistakes, and unclear buttons. Its fun, to be sure, but its also a way for me to sharpen my skills.I began playing this game long before I became a professional UX designer. It was my way of putting on the design-thinking hat, of faking it until I made it. It was experimenting Do I enjoy doing this? Do I like thinking this way?Find ways to experiment with new skills every day to set you down your path. Grab a small project here and a volunteer gig there. If you want to be a lawyer, intern at your district court. If you want to be a yoga instructor, ask a teacher you admire to mentor you once a week. You dont have to quit your job to startBut before you do anything else, understand that it takes a beginners mindset. Its critical to give yourself the freedom to fail. Youre going to stumble, but youre not going to give up.3. Evaluate Your ExperimentAs I took on small projects and critiqued fonts in my free time, I was collecting information about how I felt. When I first started UX design, my goal was to have a job in four months. Two months in, Id failed to hit expectations on a project. The design was terrible, and the client was angry. I felt like UX design was the worst decision Id ever made, and I almost quit right there.But two things kept me going One, I was only halfway through my experiment. Two, I liked the work even when it was hard. No, it wasnt particularly fun being told that my work wasnt up to par but the experiment wasnt over, and until it was, I wouldnt have the information I needed to decide whether to persevere or pivot.At the end of your experiment, whether it succeeded or failed, look back at your whys. Did interacting with people for a living turn out to be as stimulating as youd hoped? Did you find something new to enjoy during your stint at the law firm? If you failed, what kept you moving and why? If your answers align with your values, persevere. I f not, pivot.If you do have to pivot, dont dwell on it. Not every role is going to align with your values and sense of self. But if it did, keep going. Reach for that next rung on the ladder youre trying to climb. I have yet to meet someone who is unhappy while learning about something that interests them. Challenged? Yes. Exhausted? Perhaps. But deeply unhappy? No.Ultimately, remember that its not really about success or failure at all. You designed your experiment explicitly to help yourself. If you found a career you love, thats a valuable outcome. If you discovered that you didnt want to pursue something, thats valuable, too. But most of all, you gave yourself the freedom to learn, to be a beginner again and to try something new. That, I think youll agree, is the most valuable outcome of all.A version of this article originally appeared on SUCCESS.com.Aliya Marder is an associate director and designer at Philosophie, a digital innovation firm with offices in San Francisco, Los A ngeles, New York City, and Seattle. It helps large organizations validate and develop their promising ideas through agile design, rapid prototyping, and software craftsmanship.