Ask HN: Recommendation for a good UI/UX expert?
After hours of looking on the web, the one thing I've realized is that for this type of work you really need someone who comes with recommendations. So I turn to you guys for help.
Thanks!
EDIT: We are an angel-funded startup, building a web-based research aggregation tool. We have a budget of up to $5000. We are looking for someone to help come up with a clean design, branding, and layout. We have 4 unique pages, and a bookmarklet that needs the creative touch. We are implementing using the JEE stack (Struts2, JSPs, etc.), and have been using Blueprint CSS for layout.
EDIT AGAIN: We have 3 developers on staff, we have been able to come up with a basic site layout, color scheme, and know how to wire it up. What we want is someone to give us a new logo, CSS, header, footer, graphics for certain controls on the page, and maybe if they have a better idea on how to present certain data (but this isn't as important).
19 comments
[ 3.1 ms ] story [ 72.2 ms ] threadAlso, good UI/UX experts would already be busy with ongoing projects, your solicitation barely registers anything on an excitement scale. Should divulge a bit more info about your project, or industry, or what you want to do.
Contact those people and try to convince them to work with you. Be prepared to spend a lot (which is going to be worth it if they're good).
Disclaimer: She's my cousin. :)
It does not sound like you want UX --- it sounds like you want a designer. If you just want to look nice, that's a $1500-$4000 project. My advice, based on our experience: post to Craigslist and compare portfolios.
Also if the company is important to you as it should be you might want to hire someone familiar with branding to do your branding. Having a UI person do your branding is like having a programmer do your UI. They might know a bit about it but are definitely not the expert.
Lastly, if you're looking for someone with recommendations but don't know anyone personally try linkedin.com. Check out some profiles, look at their recommendations and check out their website. You can see my profile as a starting point.
,Jose Benavides
(1) The look/feel designers
(2) The UX/IA people who spend most of their time in wireframe
(3) The "developers" who hook things up and get things running.
The difference between (1) and (2) is pretty huge. I've been disappointed on projects that needed strong look/feel but got mostly IA/UX. Here's more advice to readers: you're going to feel like you're "supposed" to want IA and UX. Fuck that. If you want to look cool, clearly communicate that that's what you want.
No matter whom you decide to go with look at the portfolio first. I can't emphasize this enough. If you don't like what they've done before then chances are you won't like what they'll do for you. If you want a "cool flashy site" find a person that builds great "cool flashy sites". Don't go for the person that loves minimalism.
Whenever I build a UI team I look at the portfolio first. If I like what I see then I look at the credentials and where they've worked. Otherwise I pass.
Richesh, From reading your updates it sounds like you want a graphic designer and not a UI designer. If you have a structure and layout that you like and just need someone to make shiny buttons and give you a good color palette then a graphic designer is what you're looking for.
He did the UX for our CMS, and has just quit his day job to do Freelancing full time (and work for Servee)
Check out http://demo.servee.com for some UX work and http://kkellydesign.com for general Design
(also highlandpr.com/portfolio for branding work)
I personally know of at least two other in-the-works tools like this. I'm interested to see what the competitive space looks like for this market in the next 6-18 months.
And I should have said "That fit this description". I have no idea if they're like your solution.