Making an app look "pretty" is only 10 percent of a Product Designer's job. The other 90 percent is solving complex human problems. If a user cannot find the checkout button, or if a visually impaired user cannot read your light grey text, your product will fail. Passing an interview for a UI/UX Design role at a top tech company requires you to defend your design decisions using data, psychology, and accessibility standards. This course tests your design logic under real world constraints with 200 scenario based questions across four mock exams.
This Course Offers
- UX Research and cognitive psychology mastery: Test your knowledge of cognitive psychology including Fitts's Law, Miller's Law, and User Journey Mapping. Learn to reduce cognitive load and map user pain points using data driven methods.
- UI Design and accessibility proficiency: Test your ability to apply WCAG accessibility contrast standards, Grid Systems, and Visual Hierarchy. Learn to enforce accessibility standards that make products usable for everyone.
- Figma mastery including Auto Layout and prototyping: Assess your mastery of Figma including building Auto Layout components, dynamic Variants, and High Fidelity prototypes. Test your ability to organize component sets and create interactive prototypes.
- Usability testing and developer handoff: Validate your knowledge of unmoderated testing, Heuristic Evaluations, and Developer Handoffs. Learn to communicate CSS parameters using Dev Mode and bridge the gap between design and development.
Why We Love This Course
- It tests the logic behind design decisions, not just visual taste. Many design portfolios show pretty screens that would never work in production. This course tests whether you understand the psychology, accessibility, and usability principles that make designs actually functional.
- It covers the complete product design workflow. From UX research and cognitive psychology to UI accessibility, Figma prototyping, and developer handoff, you are tested on the entire journey that real product designers navigate daily.
- The technical depth on Figma is substantial. You are challenged on building responsive Auto Layout buttons, organizing component sets, creating variants, and building high fidelity prototypes, not just basic shape drawing.
- It is designed specifically for interview preparation. Passing a UI/UX design interview at a top tier company requires defending your decisions. This course prepares you with scenario based questions that mirror what you will face in portfolio reviews and technical whiteboard interviews.
Pretty designs that ignore psychology, accessibility, and usability fail in the real world. The question is whether you want to master the UX research, UI accessibility, Figma prototyping, and usability testing skills that top companies actually test in interviews, or keep building portfolios that look good but would never ship.