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Primary design concentration:
Interaction Design, Design Research
and Strategy
Most preferred tool for designing:
Markers, Whiteboard, Conversation
1. How and why did you choose to
become a designer?
I’ve wanted to do a lot of
things, I never knew what I wanted. My aspirations
ranged from becoming a social worker, anthropologist,
linguist to car mechanic. That’s how I knew
interaction design was for me, because my job involves
learning about people in their environments, understanding
their behavior and problems. When I design I roleplay
the people I studied. It’s fascinating to get
to live through other people’s lives this way.
I think I can do this forever.
2. Challenges you encounter as a
designer and how do you deal with them?
My biggest challenges have been
to work with the politics that exist in groups of
people and managing the hierarchical nature of the
business world while staying inspired and maintaining
a sense of innocence to my creative work.
3. Your definition of an “elegant
solution,” that is, good design?
Elegant solutions are easy to explain
to other people, people get it and give you a “ah
ha” response, especially those whose problems
the solution is solving.
4. From skills to values, what makes
a designer successful?
In the business of design, design
skills are a given, that alone can only take you so
far. You need to have confidence without any arrogance,
constant thirst for learning, care about the industry
and it moving forward, give back to the next generation,
care about making others better and not just yourself,
keep an open mind, stay hopeful, approach every problem
with a fresh mindset, open to different perspectives,
be a good listener, care about about the team shining
than yourself, constantly draw inspirations from things
not in the design industry, and most of all work really
hard.
5. How do you stay motivated and
grow personally and professionally as a designer?
I look at other people’s work,
learn new methods, pay attention to the industry and
get involved professionally, attend conferences and
try to write original thinking about design that challenges
me to do research. Most importantly, I listen to people.
6. For those aspiring to become
a designer, whatever the discipline,what is your advice?
Don’t stop soul searching,
knowing yourself and being comfortable with yourself
wherever you are is so important. Ask: What makes
you happy? Why do you want to be a designer? What
do you dream about? What gets you going? And pursue
them, nothing is out of your reach you just have to
work hard at it and want it bad enough.
7. What is your quest in design?
I hope that design becomes a tool
for developing countries to evolve in their own way,
and not by anyone else's standards; a tool that helps
people maintain their culture, not ruin it. I hope
one day, designers really change the world by saving
it and not taking away from it or adding unnecessary
clutter to it. I hope that one day designers can make
a living out of goodwill and social work. I hope to
be a part of all of this.
New York-based Liya Zheng
recommends all designers to experience “Butoh
Dance (teaches you subtle movement and patience),
Stravinsky (teaches you abstraction), Do Des’Kaden
(teaches you to use color passionately).” Her
blog is Insights
observed.
Image courtesy of colorinmywire
at flickr
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