Figma



Posted on 5 Mar, 2025

I actually started studying a bachelor in social and cultural analysis but didn’t really pursue that because I’ve always had and kept gaining interest in tech, this was around 1st gen of iPad Air and Chromecast f.e.
On the flip side, I’ve always been interested in humans from a anthropological perspective and was on the look for some kind of combination of those - especially human-computer interaction. That’s how I stumbled across interaction design and took a stab at applying and got in. I then landed my first job as an UX/UI designer at a big news company in Sweden.
Identifying, communicating, visualizing and solving the right problems. Empower users to give them the right conditions and tools to solve what they want to achieve.
I focus on blending business & design strategy, research and simplicity. Having a strong passion for crafting intuitive, visually compelling, and accessible digital experiences, you need to strive to deliver seamless, user-centered solutions. This means also a lot of cross team collaboration and taking technical considerations into account as well as balancing business goals with user needs.
To me it's been handling difficult stakeholders and decoding feedback. UI is a very subjective thing to feedback quickly on, it's important to frame and ask the right questions to get the most out of design crit sessions. Own your design and share your work early on.
Perfect is the enemy of good — don’t focus on details too much.
I’d say I wish I would focus more on human behavior earlier on my career rather than getting good on a specific tool. Trends, tools and techniques come and go, but we’re still the same humans interacting.
Join forums, talk to people outside your industry. I recently got into Ambition Empower which is a subscription service where thought-leaders in UX, service design, and product design helps you and your team to grow. It is optimized for a busy schedule, allowing you to spend as little as one hour per week. It’s really good!
In general my creativity gets fueled by staying curios and playing around with concepts that aren't business critical or even connected to anything I necessarily need to finish, just to try things out and play around more.
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