Video Title: UI UX Designer Interview Questions And Answers 2025 | UI UX Design Interview Questions | Intellipaat
Channel: Intellipaat
Speakers: The transcript does not name the speaker.
Duration: 00:45:03
Introduction
This video prepares viewers for UI/UX design interviews by covering frequently asked questions. The video breaks down core concepts, tools, and design principles to help candidates confidently answer interview questions.
Key Takeaways
UI (User Interface) vs. UX (User Experience): UI focuses on the visual aspects (look and feel) of a product, while UX focuses on the overall user experience and ease of use.
A/B Testing: A method to compare two versions of a design to see which performs better, improving user engagement, reducing bounce rates, and increasing conversion rates.
UI/UX Design Tools: The video highlights Figma (wireframing and prototyping), ChatGPT (brainstorming and content generation), Framer (interactive prototypes), Principle (advanced prototypes), Notion (collaborative documentation), and Dribbble (portfolio showcasing).
Design Thinking: An iterative problem-solving approach that prioritizes user needs, involving stages like defining the problem, understanding users, ideating solutions, prototyping, and testing.
Design Systems: A collection of reusable components and guidelines to ensure consistency and efficiency in design and development.
Prototyping: Creating rough versions of a product to test design ideas before full development (low-fidelity, medium-fidelity, and high-fidelity prototypes).
UI/UX Laws: The video explains Hick's Law (limiting choices), Jakob's Law (familiarity), Fitts's Law (button size and placement), Miller's Law (limiting information), and Gestalt principles (grouping related items).
UX Evaluation: A process to assess how well a product meets user needs, involving steps like identifying the product, defining questions, planning methods, collecting data, and providing suggestions.
Micro-interactions: Small, quick feedback mechanisms in a UI that improve the user experience.
Information Architecture: Organizing and structuring content to facilitate easy navigation and information retrieval.
UX Design Principles: User centricity, consistency, hierarchy, context, user control, accessibility, and usability.
Universal Design: Creating interfaces accessible and usable by everyone, regardless of age, ability, or background.
User Personas: Creating detailed representations of different user groups to tailor design solutions to their specific needs.
Visual Design Principles: Balance, contrast, alignment, repetition, hierarchy, and white space.
Wireframes and Prototypes: Wireframes outline the basic structure and layout, while prototypes simulate the user experience; both are essential for iterative design and user testing.