My talk this year was on how to give design feedback. Specifically, how to give useful feedback when you’re not a designer. It was a tough topic to prepare, because I had to research and work through the problem myself; it’s something that’s been troubling me for a number of years.
I took the risk of keeping the presentation short, allowing 20 minutes for a mini-workshop getting actual critiques from attendees. The goal was to ask attendees how they’d respond in example design critiques using the advice from my talk. I also had a 1:00pm time slot and crowd interaction allowed me to fight off post lunch food comas as best as I could.
I can happily report that it went very well. Things ran smoothly, there was plenty of audience participation (and it was ~80% developers!), and I had some nice discussions afterward.
After the conference, I spotted this great review and among the retweets and mentions were these awesome sketch notes:
Sketchnotes: Designing Feedback for Everyone @browningeric #stirtrek #sketchnotes @stirtrek https://t.co/wqMqkoVgOS
— Binaebi Akah (@siriomi) May 6, 2016
There’s much more to learn and share around feedback, so I look forward to hopefully giving a similar presentation again and discussing with more people.
My slides are available here. If you’re interested in a live presentation of this talk, please reach out to eric@coffeeandcode.com!
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