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What to Look For When Hiring a UI/UX Designer

Hiring a UI/UX designer is harder than it sounds. Portfolios are curated and polished — they show you the best possible version of someone's work but not the thinking, process, or decision-making behind the visuals.

Understand the Difference: UI vs UX

UI designers focus on visual design — typography, colour, layout, and iconography. UX designers focus on experience design — user flows, information architecture, wireframes, and making the product intuitive. Good product designers do both.

Look for Process, Not Just Output

A great portfolio shows research findings, wireframes, multiple iterations, and how user feedback shaped the final design. Ask: walk me through a project where user research changed your initial design direction.

Test for Communication Skills

Design is inherently collaborative. A designer who produces beautiful work but cannot explain their decisions or receive feedback constructively will be a problem in production. Evaluate how they communicate in your first conversation.

Check Developer Handoff Quality

Ask how they handle developer handoff: Do they document spacing, typography scales, colour systems, and component states? Do they annotate interactive states and edge cases?

Red Flags to Watch For

  • Portfolio with only finished screens and no process documentation
  • Cannot explain why specific design decisions were made
  • Never mentions users, user research, or validation
  • Visually beautiful work that does not function intuitively
  • Defensiveness when receiving design feedback

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