As is known, design is a rather broad and hard-to-define term. There are a wealth of different responsibilities encompassed by the term designer and design-related roles which have been existing in a wide range of areas, varying from print (publications and magazine) to industrial design (furniture and cars).

With new design roles emerging in the industry, job titles like UX/UI designers seem to be confusing for both experienced and uninitiated designers. Before diving deeper, let’s have a quick look at the difference between UX and UI terms.

User Experience (UX) design is a concept that has many dimensions and primarily concerned with how the product will feel. To solve a specific user problem, a UX designer will explore many different approaches, as any given design problem doesn’t have one single right answer. By identifying verbal/non-verbal stumbling blocks, UX designers refine and iterate to make the “best” user experience. Here is how Laura Klein (the author of UX for Lean Startups) and Justin Mifsud (the founder of Usability Geek) define this terms:

“UX design is the process used to determine what the experience will be like when a user interacts with your product.”

“It’s a process of designing systems that offer a great experience to users.”

Deliverables: storyboards, wireframes of screens and sitemap

Tools of the trade:

* Axure, a desktop-based application to build static wireframes, interactive prototypes, with rich features but a steep learning curve for newcomers.

* Mockplus, a free wireframing tool to make mobile, web and desktop applications, with fully visualized interaction and ready-made components included. The newly-released team collaboration features will speed up your teamwork with less communication cost, with more on-demand features to come down the road. A bunch of cool new features has been released in its latest version, including the Repeater, UI Flow, MindMap design mode, Templates, Sketch Import as well as the Auto Data Fill, all together to bring your design to a new level.

* Balsamiq, a mockup and wireframing tool for web and mobile apps, focusing on low-fidelity (or hard-drawn) prototypes.

* Justinmind, an authoring tool for web and mobile app prototypes, requiring design experience and outputting high-fidelity wireframes.

User Interface (UI) design is the series of pages, screens as well as visual elements (like icons and buttons) that you may use to interact with a device. Unlike UX designers who are concerned with the product overall feel, UI designers are responsible for designing the product layout and all other visual elements of the pages or system screens. Here is how a typical user interface designer — Steve Hickey — describes this field:

“User interface design is prettying the pixels up. It’s a component of user experience design. It’s no less important than any other part of the process, and a huge part of what constitutes a great user experience. Many people think this part of the design is really the whole shebang, but they’re wrong. It makes the experience aesthetically pleasing, but good UI design on poor UX design is still poor design.”

Deliverables: pixel-perfect mockups, mood board, and UI style guide

Tools of the trade:

* Sketch

* Photoshop

* Illustrator

* Fireworks

15 Best UI/UX Designers Recommended on Twitter

In the world of user experience/user interface, there’s no shortage of new technologies and fresh design inspiration to get our creative juices flowing. Twitter is such a great place to dig the occasional bit of insight from experts in this industry. Searching around on the social media site can be a pretty frustrating experience, and we have rounded up a list of famous UX designers on Twitter for you to follow or get connected in 2018.

1. Luke Wroblewski

As a web thought leader, Luke Wroblewski has contributed to softwares that are widely used by 700+ million people. He was formerly VP designer at Yahoo, and now establishes a startup called “Input Factory”, focusing on making big value from micro mobile interactions. Three books on web design have been published by him. Also, you can find lots of UX/UI designers courses out there.

2. Mockplus

Known as a rapid prototyping tool, Mockplus has emerged as a faster and easier existence among UX/UI designers. It balances well between ease-of-use and functionality, with a selection of the best UX resources, inspiration, tips & tricks for all level of designers. Whether the latest design trends or design preview of prototyping tool, from basic UX/UI concept analysis to overall analysis on design phenomenon, you will have fun and get inspired there. You can sign up for its newsletter and or subscribe to its NewsFeed to receive the most recent news!

3. David Armano

As the director of Global Strategy, David owns two decades of experience in digital branding and marketing for large-sized companies like Ebay, Adidas and HP. Plus, he’s a productive writer and has been contributing to Bloomberg Businessweek during the past.

4. Andy Budd

He is a UX leader at UX design agency named Clearleft and also the creator of a usability testing application called Silverrback. Andy has been a groundbreaking contributor to the pioneering Web Standards movement, with post opinions and useful links regularly posted for fellow designers.

5. Jared M Spool

Jared M Spool has 15 years experience in user interface engineering and is a highly recognized authority in this field. If you are now looking for regular interaction, you can follow his account and there will be bountiful debate and sharings across his feed.

6. Aarron Walter

As the author of Designing for Emotion, Aarron will tell you how exactly to get users attracted by your website. His Twitter feed is full of interesting UX insights and design inspiration, with an entire list of his publications on his personal website.

7. Paul Boag

Paul Boag, a prominent UX strategist with two decades experience in this field, is originally the co-founder of web design agency of Headscape. His feed is regularly updated with a mixture of insights, conversations and useful links, etc.

8. Joshua Porter

Joshua is a co-founder of 52 Weeks of UX, a industry-leading UX blog visited and read by 10,000+ UX professionals. Plus, he is the UX director at HubSpot, and the writer of Bokardo Blog. Even though, this guy still manages to tweet about UX insights and tips on a regular basis.

9. Whitney Hess

She is an independent UX strategist and coaches companies on how to design products more compassionately and mindfully. By following her feed, you will find new posts, insights as well as opinions.

10. Alex Morris

Alex is UX director for web design and user experience consultancy Mark Boulton Design. He has 15 years experience of designing and contributes a lot to building websites, applications and games. He shares knowledge of his own via his opinionated and honest Twitter feed.

11. Wilson Miner

Wilson has helped create the first version of the Django web framework in 2004. Since then, this busy guy has worked for some well-known companies, including Facebook, Everyblock, Apple and Rdio.

12. Mike Kus

Mike is a UK-based guy who takes specialty in graphic design, web/ui design, photography as well as illustration. He also worked for the likes of Microsoft, Twitter, Mailchimp and so on, taking active part in design/tech conferences.

13. Nick Finck

As a user experience professional who has been in this industry for over a decade, Nick helps create both mobile and web experience for Google, Adobe, Intel and Oprah.com. He is keeping good work at Amazon AWS, running an online publication for web professionals.

14. Ryan Singer

Ryan has been building things at Basecamp, an easy-to-use project management system for businesses for 10+ years. On his website, you will be able to check out many articles and talks on UX and UI.

15. Chris Messina

Chris is the very guy who created the hashtag. He is also a user experience designer behind Google+ and the co-founder of Barcamp. This is an international network of user-generated workshops that are primarily focused on around web and technology.

Above are the best UI/UX designers for you to follow on Twitter. Please comment below if you want to share your thoughts with us, and I’ll make the list updated based on that. If you’re concerned about the topics of UX/UI designers salary or job, you might also like:

How to become a UX/UI designer when you know nothing

What Skills Should You Master to Be An Excellent UX/UI Designer on Earth?

10 Questions You’ll Be Asked in a UX Interview