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Chris Cameron: UX Writing for a Travel-Planning App – Episode 11

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Content provided by Larry Swanson. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Larry Swanson or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
Chris Cameron At Booking.com, they've been helping travelers with their trip planning for many years. The arrival of generative AI has given them new ways to help travelers with this business-critical task. Over the past year, Chris Cameron has applied his UX writing and content strategy skills in ways both familiar and new to help build a new AI-powered Trip Planner tool that integrates with Booking.com's travel-booking app. We talked about: his work as a principal UX writer at Booking.com on their "writing system," which is sort of like their version of a design system for UX writers his recruitment to a "tiger team" at Booking to develop a new travel-planning AI chatbot for their travel-booking app the key differences between his prior product work and his work on this AI product the new kinds of collaboration that have arisen in his work on a generative AI product, in particular his work with machine-learning engineers the transition from the prototype of the app to its current position as an established product the product-feedback mechanisms that are built into the Booking "Trip Planner" how to jump start your learning if you're new to working on generative-AI tools how they were able to leverage components in their current design system to build the new Trip Planner app the prompt engineering skills he developed by creating an AI "story robot" for his three-year-old son his optimism about the employment prospects for UX writers how traditional content strategy practices like establishing voice and tone and consistent terminology manifest in AI product design how new AI practices are just as likely to show up as enterprise productivity improvements as in customer-facing products and features Chris's bio Chris Cameron has over 13 years of professional writing experience across journalism, marketing, and UX. As a Principal UX Writer at Booking.com, Chris oversees UX Writing Systems, managing the tools and workflows that enable over 80 UX writers to efficiently create high-quality content localised into over 45 languages and dialects. Born in Boston and raised in Phoenix, Chris now lives in Amsterdam with his wife and son. Connect with Chris online LinkedIn Video Here’s the video version of our conversation: https://youtu.be/bptOvimY4uU Podcast intro transcript This is the Content and AI podcast, episode number 11. As generative-AI tools are introduced into consumer products and enterprise workflows, the core work of content designers and UX writers still feels familiar, but the context for the work and many of its details are evolving. Over the past year, at Booking.com, where he has been working on an AI-powered travel-planning app, Chris Cameron has seen first-hand how the traditional concerns of content strategy and UX writing manifest in the world of generative AI. Interview transcript Larry: Hi, everyone. Welcome to Episode #11 of the Content + AI Podcast. I'm really happy today to welcome to the show Chris Cameron. Chris is a principal UX writer at Booking.com, the big travel booking agency based in Amsterdam. Welcome to the show, Chris. Tell the folks a little bit more about what you do there at Booking. Chris: Well, thanks, Larry, for having me. Yeah, I'll give a bit of my background as well. Like yourself, I started in journalism and then got into copywriting. And after moving to Amsterdam from the US at a very young age, 25, I guess, I eventually joined Booking in 2016, a little over seven years ago. And back then, the role was actually called copywriting. There was about 25 of us. And over the years we sort of discovered that we were actually UX writers, and we've become now this community of over 80 UX writers. And now, I am a principal UX writer, and the area I look after we call writing systems. And what that is is sort of like the writing version of design systems, but it's not so much a system,
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36 episodes

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Manage episode 394076201 series 3539884
Content provided by Larry Swanson. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Larry Swanson or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
Chris Cameron At Booking.com, they've been helping travelers with their trip planning for many years. The arrival of generative AI has given them new ways to help travelers with this business-critical task. Over the past year, Chris Cameron has applied his UX writing and content strategy skills in ways both familiar and new to help build a new AI-powered Trip Planner tool that integrates with Booking.com's travel-booking app. We talked about: his work as a principal UX writer at Booking.com on their "writing system," which is sort of like their version of a design system for UX writers his recruitment to a "tiger team" at Booking to develop a new travel-planning AI chatbot for their travel-booking app the key differences between his prior product work and his work on this AI product the new kinds of collaboration that have arisen in his work on a generative AI product, in particular his work with machine-learning engineers the transition from the prototype of the app to its current position as an established product the product-feedback mechanisms that are built into the Booking "Trip Planner" how to jump start your learning if you're new to working on generative-AI tools how they were able to leverage components in their current design system to build the new Trip Planner app the prompt engineering skills he developed by creating an AI "story robot" for his three-year-old son his optimism about the employment prospects for UX writers how traditional content strategy practices like establishing voice and tone and consistent terminology manifest in AI product design how new AI practices are just as likely to show up as enterprise productivity improvements as in customer-facing products and features Chris's bio Chris Cameron has over 13 years of professional writing experience across journalism, marketing, and UX. As a Principal UX Writer at Booking.com, Chris oversees UX Writing Systems, managing the tools and workflows that enable over 80 UX writers to efficiently create high-quality content localised into over 45 languages and dialects. Born in Boston and raised in Phoenix, Chris now lives in Amsterdam with his wife and son. Connect with Chris online LinkedIn Video Here’s the video version of our conversation: https://youtu.be/bptOvimY4uU Podcast intro transcript This is the Content and AI podcast, episode number 11. As generative-AI tools are introduced into consumer products and enterprise workflows, the core work of content designers and UX writers still feels familiar, but the context for the work and many of its details are evolving. Over the past year, at Booking.com, where he has been working on an AI-powered travel-planning app, Chris Cameron has seen first-hand how the traditional concerns of content strategy and UX writing manifest in the world of generative AI. Interview transcript Larry: Hi, everyone. Welcome to Episode #11 of the Content + AI Podcast. I'm really happy today to welcome to the show Chris Cameron. Chris is a principal UX writer at Booking.com, the big travel booking agency based in Amsterdam. Welcome to the show, Chris. Tell the folks a little bit more about what you do there at Booking. Chris: Well, thanks, Larry, for having me. Yeah, I'll give a bit of my background as well. Like yourself, I started in journalism and then got into copywriting. And after moving to Amsterdam from the US at a very young age, 25, I guess, I eventually joined Booking in 2016, a little over seven years ago. And back then, the role was actually called copywriting. There was about 25 of us. And over the years we sort of discovered that we were actually UX writers, and we've become now this community of over 80 UX writers. And now, I am a principal UX writer, and the area I look after we call writing systems. And what that is is sort of like the writing version of design systems, but it's not so much a system,
  continue reading

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