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How to Build a UX Portfolio That Actually Gets You Hired - Theory & Best Practices (Part 1)

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Manage episode 521344031 series 3665092
Content provided by Tyler White and Nick Groeneveld. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Tyler White and Nick Groeneveld 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.

In this episode of The Design Table Podcast, Tyler and Nick discuss the one thing every product designer struggles with the most: creating a portfolio that actually gets interviews, callbacks, and job offers.

Most designers ship portfolios that read like academic essays. They're too long, too vague, too generic, and way too similar to everyone else’s. Even great designers get ignored because their hero section, titles, and case studies fail to communicate what hiring managers actually care about.

Tyler and Nick walk through why portfolios miss the mark, how recruiters skim your site (in less than 2 minutes), and the step-by-step structure of a high-conversion portfolio. Everything comes by from your H1 to your footer.

They also cover niching vs. generalizing, how to stand out in a crowded market, what your case study titles really need to say, and how to communicate business impact without sounding like a template (and everyone else).

If you’re a junior designer, in a bootcamp, applying for your first product job, or rebuilding your portfolio after months of ghosting… this episode will save you weeks of trial and error, frustration, and burn out.

Here is what’s on the table in Part 1:
🔸 Why most UX portfolios are way too long (and what to cut)
🔸 The hero section formula that gets you interviews
🔸 How hiring managers actually scan portfolios
🔸 Why generic “I’m a UX designer” intros kill your chances
🔸 Positioning yourself without locking into one industry
🔸 How to write case study titles that show business impact
🔸 Treating your homepage like a sales page
🔸 Using social proof & storytelling to stand out
🔸 Why messaging must be consistent across your entire brand

📢 Subscribe to The Design Table Podcast
👉 https://www.designtablepodcast.com/subscribe

👋 More about Tyler and Nick
Tyler: https://www.designtablepodcast.com/hosts/tyler-white
Nick: https://www.designtablepodcast.com/hosts/nick-groeneveld

  continue reading

22 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 521344031 series 3665092
Content provided by Tyler White and Nick Groeneveld. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Tyler White and Nick Groeneveld 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.

In this episode of The Design Table Podcast, Tyler and Nick discuss the one thing every product designer struggles with the most: creating a portfolio that actually gets interviews, callbacks, and job offers.

Most designers ship portfolios that read like academic essays. They're too long, too vague, too generic, and way too similar to everyone else’s. Even great designers get ignored because their hero section, titles, and case studies fail to communicate what hiring managers actually care about.

Tyler and Nick walk through why portfolios miss the mark, how recruiters skim your site (in less than 2 minutes), and the step-by-step structure of a high-conversion portfolio. Everything comes by from your H1 to your footer.

They also cover niching vs. generalizing, how to stand out in a crowded market, what your case study titles really need to say, and how to communicate business impact without sounding like a template (and everyone else).

If you’re a junior designer, in a bootcamp, applying for your first product job, or rebuilding your portfolio after months of ghosting… this episode will save you weeks of trial and error, frustration, and burn out.

Here is what’s on the table in Part 1:
🔸 Why most UX portfolios are way too long (and what to cut)
🔸 The hero section formula that gets you interviews
🔸 How hiring managers actually scan portfolios
🔸 Why generic “I’m a UX designer” intros kill your chances
🔸 Positioning yourself without locking into one industry
🔸 How to write case study titles that show business impact
🔸 Treating your homepage like a sales page
🔸 Using social proof & storytelling to stand out
🔸 Why messaging must be consistent across your entire brand

📢 Subscribe to The Design Table Podcast
👉 https://www.designtablepodcast.com/subscribe

👋 More about Tyler and Nick
Tyler: https://www.designtablepodcast.com/hosts/tyler-white
Nick: https://www.designtablepodcast.com/hosts/nick-groeneveld

  continue reading

22 episodes

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