User Experience Design Fundamentals

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Below are the top discussions from Reddit that mention this online Udemy course.

Design Web Sites and Mobile Apps that Your Users Love and Return to Again and Again with UX Expert Joe Natoli

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Taught by
Joe Natoli

Reddit Posts and Comments

0 posts • 5 mentions • top 5 shown below

r/UXDesign • comment
1 points • SoberRightNow

Yes! There are a lot. Getting exposure to as much info as you can will help a lot. It sounds like you are already on your eay. I'd do this one or something else that shows the basics:

https://www.udemy.com/course/user-experience-design-fundamentals/?LSNPUBID=3K2KQ7WWR6M&ranEAID=3K2KQ7WWR6M&ranMID=39197&ranSiteID=3K2KQ7WWR6M-svFrAOurjEm._xE9Mru8cA

Also read Nielson Norman articles.

r/business • comment
1 points • AcidHue

I'm sorry to tell you, and I have to be truthful; but this is terrible, probably one of the worse apps I've ever seen. You need to take a course in design or UX. I can recommend something like https://www.udemy.com/course/user-experience-design-fundamentals/

r/web_design • comment
1 points • dopppsss
r/webdev • post
5 points • LeSabreToothCat
Design Training

I'm trying to find a ux design education platform for a team of developers and was curious if anyone here had feedback or thoughts on what was successful at your company or with you specifically. The group I'm attempting to find education for is mostly back-end ruby on rails developers with very little experience with design. I would ideally like three levels of education for various members of the team, with an intro to UX, fundamentals, and maybe a human centered design class - ideally all within the same suite of education if possible. Also ideally it's something a developer can complete during their down time at work, not a daily scheduled class.

Right now, my top contenders are:

I'm a design professional with no "formal" training in user experience, but have honed my skill set over about an 8 year span (4 spent freelancing) and without having gone through a bootcamp or online training myself, I'm having trouble finding what's appropriate for someone completely foreign to the field.

*Edit - I'll also say I looked into NN Group and while I belive they'll probably be the best education option, their cost turned me (and my company) away.

Thanks

r/userexperience • comment
5 points • AltruisticRecover5

If i were you, i would ask this questions: what do you want to get after joining the courses? Is it for certificates, for learning UX theories, or get a hands on projects?

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If you want the certificates, i think IDF could be the right place. However, if deep down you only want an experience and hands on project You don't need to pay to take part in the UX course. There are tons of free UX course on internet https://uxplanet.org/30-best-online-course-websites-to-learn-ui-ux-updated-6b104762731a.

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Moreover hands on projects can also be done by yourself. By asking a daily problem from your familiy, friends. Then you create a UX case study from it.

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But, if you really want a paid courses there are some better courses than IDF: