![]() ![]() ![]() 2) UX and UI (*this medium article will focus on just this section) Through case studies and interviews with founders, product experts, and investors, you will learn how to efficiently conduct user research and build an entrepreneurial mindset. The course is broken into four parts which include: 1) Ideation and Validationĭevelop, validate and refine your ideas to ensure you’re building for product/market fit. (skip the Syllabus if you have seen Part 1 ) Harpinder Singh - Partner Innovation Endeavors Syllabus Nir Eyal - Author on works related to behavioural economics, neuroscience and consumer psychology Pete Koomen - Co-founder, CTO of Optimizely Tomer Sharon - Senior UX Researcher at Google Richard Fulcher - Head of Google Material UX and Engineering Nadya Direkova - Senior Designer at Google X ![]() Jen Kozenski Devins - UX Designer Google Apps Accessibility In the lectures you will hear from industry experts in the field which include:Īmir Shevat - VP Developer Experience at Twitch and was the former Developer Relations Program Manager at GoogleĬhris Saden - Full Stack Software Engineer at Udacity In addition, it covers how to design lo-fidelity mockups for products and capture appropriate metrics. It teaches how to perform Google Design Sprint (developed at Google Ventures and exclusively taught in this course) to design, prototype and test your ideas. The ‘Product Design by Google’ course basically covers Silicon Valley startups best practices & frameworks used for product design. (skip the Summary if you have seen Part 1 ) You can enrol for free via Udacity which it’s an educational organisation that was founded by Sebastian Thrun founder of GoogleX and David Stavens an entrepreneur, and scientist who’s in the field of robotics, machine learning and artificial intelligence. The ‘ Product Design by Google’ is a great course and I highly recommend trying it out. That’s almost as fast as Neo learns Kung-fu in the Matrix.Īlternatively, if you have completed the course these notes might come in handy to help you remember what you’ve learnt and would save you a lot of time backtracking to 129 lectures. It would take approximately 1(+-) hour to read all 4 parts which is well less than 2 months to do the course. These notes are also useful if you don’t have the time to do the course and would like a bit of a rundown. Who better to learn from but from Google who are one of the best in their field. These notes are for those of you who may feel overwhelmed by all the UI and UX software and processes out there and would like a little less noise and want to drill down to the best practices. Initially I wrote these notes for myself to help retain everything I’ve learnt but thought I’d kill two birds with one stone by learning, as well as, sharing this information with other fellow designers or people in general who are interested in the product design field. The course consists of 129 lectures and exercises and it’s estimated to take about 2 months to complete. ![]() I’ve written these for the ‘Product Design by Google’ course that I recently undertook. Remember those in high school? They were the timesavers and lifesavers, they were the cram plan the night before a big test. This article is essentially notes that are similar to CliffsNotes or SparkNotes. For those who haven’t seen Part 1 of this series, here is a little background info. ![]()
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