쉐도잉 연습: How to teach yourself UX Design (no bootcamps, no courses) - YouTube로 영어 말하기 배우기

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Meet Dan.
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Meet Dan.
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Dan the UX designer.
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Well, not really.
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Not yet.
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He's learned a thing or two on YouTube and he's decided he wants to learn UX design and become a UX designer.
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But he doesn't have the money to spend on a fancy boot camp or college degree.
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He doesn't know any UX designers,
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he doesn't have a portfolio,
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and he doesn't really know where to start.
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In today's video, we'll go through seven simple steps that will help you and Dan become a self-taught,
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self-made UX designer.
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All you have to do is like this video.
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Seriously, that's it.
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So, before we get started,
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we gotta define what being self-taught means.
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It means learning through your own initiatives rather than through formal instruction or training.
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You will ultimately decide how,
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when, and what you learn.
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And to be honest, being self-taught can be kind of risky.
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You can simply end up wasting tons of time watching random YouTube videos like this one.
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But hopefully, in this video,
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I'll guide you on the right path so you won't waste much time.
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Alright, so step one, informational interviews with UX or product designers.
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When I say informational interviews,
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I mean an informal conversation you have with someone to learn about their career,
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their background, and ultimately build a relationship with them.
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The goal is not to ask for a job or an opportunity to work at their company.
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The goal is to know what you don't know,
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or in other words, to begin understanding what you need to learn to become a successful UX or product designer.
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And that's half the battle.
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Imagine talking to a senior product designer at your dream company.
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Imagine learning the exact skill set needed to work as a UX designer at that company specifically.
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Imagine getting the inside scoop on the interviewing process.
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But most importantly, imagine building a friendship with this senior product designer.
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When you look back at your career,
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the most important thing is not the projects or the companies that you've worked at,
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but the human beings that you've connected with and all the users,
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aka people, that you've helped through your work.
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This by far is one of the most important steps of your self-taught journey because these relationships only compound over time.
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Start this as early as you can,
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but I know what you're thinking.
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I don't know anyone who's a UX or product designer.
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Who am I going to interview?
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Well, not yet.
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Check this out.
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I'm about to share a LinkedIn outreach template that has helped me connect and build relationships with product designers at Google,
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TikTok, Twitter, and more.
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On LinkedIn, I searched for a product designer filtered for people,
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then filtered by some sort of mutual connection that I can mention in a message.
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For me, I searched for anyone who went to my university,
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San Jose State University, but this can be different for you.
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Then, I clicked on as many profiles as I could,
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especially at companies I'd love to work for.
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Then, I connected, added a note that said something along the lines of,
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hey, first name, I'm glad to see a fellow SJSU alumni at Current Company.
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I'm super impressed by your career journey and I'd love to learn more about your experience at Current Company.
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I'm trying to learn from the best.
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Let me know if you would be open for a 15 to 30 minute chat sometime next week.
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Cheers, Andres.
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Can this message be refined?
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Yes, but it's a start,
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and it's worked wonders for me so far,
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and I hope this template works for you, so use it wisely.
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Also, if you're a Latino like me,
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there are awesome websites like latinxwhodesign.com,
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so go out there and build those relationships.
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Step 2.
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Learn what good UX design portfolios actually look like.
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It's important that when you learn UX design that you understand the end and result of your work.
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So by reverse engineering UX design portfolios from designers who work at your favorite companies,
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you'll understand exactly what you're working towards.
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Similar to step one, you can search for UX or product designers at your favorite company,
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and they usually have their portfolios available on their profiles.
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I would open them up,
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then save or bookmark them for later.
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This will come in handy when it's time to build your own portfolio.
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But what does a good UX design portfolio even look like?
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That's a great question, maybe for another video.
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Here are some quick qualities of a good UX portfolio that I've personally seen.
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A strong outline of user research.
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A validated problem statement.
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A clear outline of the specific contribution made by that designer.
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An explanation of why certain design decisions were made.
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An outline of limitations and project challenges.
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Sharing what went wrong during the project.
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Sharing what went right.
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User testing and user surveys.
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And finally, business impact.
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Outcomes.
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How did your designs help the business?
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Step 3.
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Start a self-initiated UX design project of your own.
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Now that you have some idea of what a good UX design case study actually looks like,
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you'll be better prepared to start a project of your own.
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I'm personally a strong believer in the learn by doing philosophy.
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There are things you'll learn by doing your own projects that an online course might not teach you.
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But what type of UX design projects should you start anyway?
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Well, think about the last time you've used an app,
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website, or software product that frustrated you.
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Why did it frustrate you?
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Was it a bad design?
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If so, is it possible that other users feel the same way?
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Maybe you can interview people who use the app or website
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and try to find out if there are others who share your frustration.
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And if interviewing people might not be possible,
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you can always Google the app or website name and outline your frustration as a question.
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Then you might find a forum of users that have had the same frustrations as you.
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This is user research.
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Then you can use this research to redesign and reimagine how the app or website could solve this user pain point,
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aka your frustration.
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I would strongly recommend designing a prototype.
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Bonus points if you then share your prototype with users and get their feedback.
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And bonus bonus points if you improve your designs based on their feedback.
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Now imagine creating a case study on that project redesign
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and sending the link to that perspective company design manager or recruiter who knows what type of opportunities that might lead to.
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But the goal of this step is simply to think about
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and choose what type of UX design project you'd like to start.
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You should give yourself a good timeline.
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Quality is better than quantity here.
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I recommend one to three months.
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Then, outline specific milestones and due dates.
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By the end of month one,
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maybe you want to finish all your user research.
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Month two, maybe you want to finish that design and prototype.
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In month three, maybe you want to get user feedback and update that prototype.
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Alright, these are some fire tips.
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You gotta like the video,
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show some love, and help get these tips out to other aspiring designers just like you.
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Step 4.
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Choose and learn a design tool.
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Now that you've connected with some UX or product designers and you've chosen a UX design project to start,
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you're ready to make a decision on what design tool you'd like to use.
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I personally use Adobe XD,
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however, I've heard great things about Figma.
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Either way, as a UX or product designer,
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you're going to have to learn many tools,
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and so the tool is not as important as the design thinking.
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Don't overthink this.
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If you're a current UX or product designer though,
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I'd love to hear from you.
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Are you team Adobe or team Figma?
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Let me know.
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Step five, find and save UX design resources.
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It's important to start building your library of UX design resources as soon as possible.
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This will speed up your workflows and save you so much time long term.
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So here are some resources to get you started.
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Apple's Human Interface Guidelines.
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Apple sets a great standard for how software should work.
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They have a beautifully organized guide to help you design better on mobile.
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Don't sleep on this one.
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Google's Material Design.
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Google also has a great guide for how software should work.
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If you're designing for Android applications specifically,
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you'll want to read this one.
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Page Flows.
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I love Page Flows.
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This one isn't free, but I think it's super worth it.
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It's a place where you can learn the design patterns and user flows of your favorite products like Spotify,
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Slack, or Notion.
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It's especially useful when you're still unfamiliar with how some of these products should work.
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So when you're doing something like a competitive analysis or research,
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this comes in handy and saves you tons of time.
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So if you're interested in using PageFlows,
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I actually have a coupon code in the description down below that you can use when signing up for your account.
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YouTube channels.
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All right, I have to give some love to the YouTube channels that have helped me throughout my UX design journey.
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You've got to subscribe to the future.
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AJ and Smart, Femke, Mizko,
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Rachel Howe, VA Experience, Jesse Showalter.
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And there's so much others that will help you learn UX design for free.
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So the next resource I know a lot of you will love are template libraries.
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Now templates are really great for speeding up your user interface design.
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Figma has an amazing library of community resources that you've got to check out,
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but there's also some paid resources as well on Creative Market, ThemeForest.net, and UI8.net.
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Check them out, definitely helpful.
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Step 6.
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Start publishing your work and your journey on places like Dribbble or Pants.
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Although it might feel scary and overwhelming in the beginning,
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publishing your work online will bring you so much opportunities.
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You'll learn and get inspired by other designers.
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And one day, if you share your work consistently,
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you might even get your first paying client project.
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Imagine that.
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And if you're scared, do it scared.
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And if you're overwhelmed, do it while overwhelmed.
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And if no one has told you this, I will.
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Your work is worth sharing.
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Your story is worth sharing.
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You are capable of being the UX designer you want to be.
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Step seven, don't lose hope, keep going.
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I don't want to sugarcoat this for you.
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This might take you a long time before you get any client work or get a UX design job.
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It might take you six months,
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it might take you a year.
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If you really want to become a UX or product designer, don't give up.
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Don't lose hope.
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Just keep at it day by day.
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And if no one believes in you, I believe in you.
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You can do it friend.
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So I'm planning to create and share a free PDF of the seven steps in this video.
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So if you're interested in having it as a reference in your UX design self-taught journey,
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sign up using the link in the description down below.
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Until next time, adios.

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이 비디오로 말하기 연습을 하는 이유는?

이 비디오에서는 UX 디자인을 스스로 학습하는 방법에 대해 배우게 됩니다. 특히, 이 대화 스타일의 콘텐츠는 강의가 아니라 실생활에서의 대화를 통해 영어 회화 연습에 적합합니다. 특히, shadowspeaks 기법을 사용하여 이 비디오에 등장하는 대화를 반복함으로써 말하기 능력을 향상시킬 수 있습니다. 실제 사례를 바탕으로 한 대화는 학습자가 실질적인 영어 표현을 익히고, IELTS 스피킹 준비에도 도움이 됩니다. 뿐만 아니라, 이런 대화를 통해 UX 디자인이라는 전문 분야에 대한 이해를 깊게 할 수 있습니다.

문맥 속의 문법 및 표현

비디오에서 언급된 주요 표현과 문법 구조는 다음과 같습니다:

  • Informational interviews라는 표현은 UX 디자이너와의 비공식적인 대화를 통해 필요한 정보를 얻는 과정을 설명합니다. 이 표현은 직업적 네트워킹의 맥락에서 자주 사용됩니다.
  • Learning through your own initiatives라는 구문은 자율학습의 중요성을 강조하며, 주체적으로 정보를 습득하는 태도를 강조합니다.
  • Building a relationship는 인맥 구축의 중요성을 강조하며, 이는 성공적인 커리어를 위해 중요한 요소입니다.

이런 표현들을 반복적으로 사용하며 영어 발음 교정에 신경 쓴다면, 실력 향상에 큰 도움이 될 것입니다.

일반적인 발음 함정

비디오에서 발음이 특히 어려운 몇 가지 단어와 표현은 다음과 같습니다:

  • UX Designer라는 표현은 외래어이기 때문에 한국어로 발음하기에 곤란할 수 있습니다. 정확한 발음을 연습하여 자연스러운 대화가 가능하도록 해야 합니다.
  • Product Designer도 마찬가지로, 발음이 헷갈려 제 위치를 제대로 표현하지 못할 수 있습니다.
  • 또한, Informational interviews의 'informational' 부분은 다양한 음절로 나뉘어져 있으므로 주의가 필요합니다. 이 단어를 반복적으로 연습하면 shadow speech 기술을 효과적으로 사용할 수 있습니다.

이런 발음 함정은 자연스러운 대화를 하는 데 방해가 될 수 있지만, 연습을 통해 극복할 수 있습니다.

쉐도잉이란? 영어 실력을 빠르게 키우는 과학적 방법

쉐도잉(Shadowing)은 원래 전문 통역사 훈련을 위해 개발된 언어 학습 기법으로, 다언어 학자인 Dr. Alexander Arguelles에 의해 대중화된 방법입니다. 핵심 원리는 간단하지만 매우 강력합니다: 원어민의 영어를 들으면서 1~2초의 짧은 지연으로 즉시 소리 내어 따라 말하는 것——마치 '그림자(shadow)'처럼 화자를 따라가는 것입니다. 문법 공부나 수동적인 청취와 달리, 쉐도잉은 뇌와 입 근육이 동시에 실시간으로 영어를 처리하고 재현하도록 훈련합니다. 연구에 따르면 이 방법은 발음 정확도, 억양, 리듬, 연음, 청취력, 말하기 유창성을 크게 향상시킵니다. IELTS 스피킹 준비와 자연스러운 영어 소통을 원하는 분들에게 특히 효과적입니다.

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