I reviewed 2,000+ product design portfolios last year. Avoid these mistakes that 90% make: 1. 𝗧𝗢𝗢 𝗠𝗔𝗡𝗬 𝗣𝗥𝗢𝗝𝗘𝗖𝗧𝗦 ❌ Showcasing every project you’ve ever worked on. ✅ 3-4 strong case studies with depth are better than 10 shallow or old ones. 2. WEAK VISUAL HIERARCHY ❌ Walls of text, tiny images. ✅ Clear sections, bold headings, and visuals that guide the viewer. 3. CONFUSING NAVIGATION ❌ Hidden menus, unclear labels, or requiring too many clicks to find case studies. ✅ Make it effortless: clear sections, easy-to-find projects, and a simple way to contact you. 4. SLOW OR CLUNKY WEBSITE ❌ Huge images, broken links, animations taking 3+ seconds to load. ✅ Your portfolio is your first impression. Make it fast and seamless. 5. NO PROCESS, JUST FINAL SCREENS ❌ A bunch of polished UI shots with no explanation. ✅ Show your thinking: research, sketches, iterations, and decisions. 6. UNCLEAR ROLES ❌ Instead of saying “We redesigned the onboarding flow.” ✅ Say: “I led UX research and wireframing, a teammate handled UI.” 7. NO METRICS ❌ “Designed a new dashboard.” ✅ “New design increased user engagement by 20% and reduced support tickets by 15%.” 8. NO PROBLEM STATEMENT ❌ “Redesigned the checkout flow.” ✅ “Users abandoned checkout at 65%. I streamlined the flow, reducing drop-off by 30%.” 9. OUTDATED OR IRRELEVANT WORK ❌ Student projects from 5+ years ago. ✅ Keep it fresh. Show work that aligns with the jobs you want. 10. NO PERSONALITY ❌ Generic “I love solving problems” statements. ✅ What makes you you? Show your voice, interests, and approach to design. Which of these mistakes have you seen or made? #uxhiring #design #productdesign #portfolio
How to Build a UI Designer Portfolio
Explore top LinkedIn content from expert professionals.
Summary
A UI designer portfolio is a curated collection of projects showcasing your design skills, problem-solving abilities, and the impact of your work. Building a strong portfolio involves more than just displaying final designs—it's about telling a compelling story of your process and results.
- Select standout projects: Limit your portfolio to 3-4 detailed case studies that demonstrate your skills, problem-solving, and the results you achieved.
- Focus on storytelling: Frame each project using a clear narrative that includes context, challenges, solutions, and outcomes to help hiring managers quickly grasp your impact.
- Design for clarity: Use clean layouts, bold headings, and quality visuals to make your portfolio easy to scan and understand in just a few minutes.
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Want to build a UX portfolio that actually gets you interviews? It starts with a strong case study. I created this simple outline for one of my mentorship clients, but it was too good not to share. If you’re a UX or product designer on the job hunt, this can help you tell your story clearly, show your impact, and stand out from the crowd. Here’s the case study formula I recommend (plus a few tips to make yours even stronger): 🔹 Background/Context: What was the project about? What was your role? Timeline? 👉 Tip: Keep this to 3–4 sentences. Add a visual of the final product. 🔹 The Problem: What problem were you solving, and why did it matter? 👉 Tip: 1–2 clear sentences. Bonus points for "before" screenshots or user quotes. 🔹 Discovery: How did you get up to speed? 👉 Tip: Share your research highlights and key findings. Show evidence of collaboration with your team and stakeholders. 🔹 Design & Iteration: How did you approach the design? 👉 Tip: Include early sketches, whiteboard sessions, and messy Figma explorations — it shows your thought process. 🔹 Testing (+ more iteration): Who did you share your designs with, and what did you learn? 👉 Tip: Summarize the feedback you got and how you incorporated it. 🔹 Impact/Outcomes: What happened because of your work? 👉 Tip: Even if the product didn’t ship, focus on what you learned, how you moved it forward, and what impact you had. A few key reminders: MAKE IT SCANNABLE. Use visuals, headings, and type hierarchy to guide people through. Tell a story. Move through your project step by step so it’s easy to follow. Be selective. You don’t need to show everything you did — just enough to show the problem, your thinking, and the outcome. Hope this helps someone out there polishing their portfolio! If you want the full template (including extra tips), feel free to DM me — happy to share. 🚀 [EDIT:] I'm so glad y'all are loving this! if we're not connected, please include a note in your connection request so I can send the full template your way. Cheers! #uxdesign #productdesign #portfolio #uxcareer
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Confession: While I've reviewed thousands of portfolios, I've never read a case study all the way through. I ALWAYS scan them. I just don't have the time to look through every detail. And I know that most other folks who are reviewing portfolios are doing the exact same thing for the same reasons. This means that your portfolio should: 1. Make it easy to scan 2. Use big, high quality visuals 3. Tell quick, concise stories 4. Most importantly, make that story easy to consume in two minutes or less If I were to build my portfolio today, here's how I would do it using these principles: 1️⃣ I'd have a top overview section that has a short blurb of what to expect/what I accomplished AND the final mockups/prototype of what I created. 2️⃣ I'd write out each case study using a word document first to make sure that my headlines told the entire story quickly and concisely. I'd use a classic story arc 1. Context/background 2. Conflict 3. Rising action 4. Climax 5. Falling action 6. Resolution The simpler version of this is the 3 Cs of storytelling: 1. Context 2. Conflict 3. Change (AKA what improved as a result of your work) 3️⃣ I'd optimize my headlines below the overview to tell the story of what I learned. Once everything was written out in a Google doc, I'd edit everything down to the essentials. I'd make sure to pull out the important learnings/quotes and make them big so reviewers could easily scan them. 4️⃣ I'd break up sections with large images to make it feel more interesting and less fatiguing. 5️⃣ I'd ask friends and family to read it and provide feedback about clarity and how much time it took them. If they can easily understand it, see my impact, and quickly go through it, then I'm on the right track. 6️⃣ I'd use LinkedIn and adplist.org to find more folks to provide feedback. Again, I'd focus their feedback on clarity and the amount of time it took for them to go through it.
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In the past few months, I’ve reviewed over 400 design portfolios while seeking to fill a mid-level design position (2-3 years of experience). More than 90% of these portfolios didn’t pass the screening process. One striking observation was that around 75% of all portfolios looked the same. If your portfolio resembles a basic template, you’re doing something wrong. Don’t get me wrong, perfect portfolios don’t exist, and I’m definitely not saying you should go overboard. However, hiring managers are reviewing many portfolios at once, and standing out with a well-designed portfolio that balances UX with a beautiful and aesthetically pleasing UI will definitely grab the hiring manager’s attention and win you more time. Top Mistakes: 1. Using the Same Design Process for All Projects: • If you have a one-size-fits-all design process, it indicates inexperience. Every project has different needs, requirements, constraints, and challenges. I want to see the challenges you’ve faced in the design process, what methods you chose to overcome a particular challenge, and why you chose that method. 2. Not Connecting Business Goals/Needs to Your Solutions: • Once I open one of your case studies, I want to see what problem you are solving and how it will help the business. Clearly linking your design solutions to business objectives demonstrates a deeper understanding of the impact of your work. 3. Not Enough Exploration: • Most portfolios I reviewed didn’t show enough solution exploration. They usually display only the chosen solution. I want to know which other solutions you considered, why you chose a particular solution over the others, and how you determined this was the best solution. 4. Too Much Clutter in Case Studies: • One of the greatest challenges in designing your portfolio is deciding how much detail to include in your case studies. Too much detail can overwhelm users (hiring managers), causing them to not finish reading your case study, which lowers your chances of getting an interview. Too little detail results in incomplete stories, which also lowers your chances. Focusing on the bigger picture and ensuring your case study is easily scannable is crucial. Make sure a user can scan and understand your case study within 30 seconds. Final Advice: There’s so much advice out there about this subject. If I have to leave you with one thing from this post, it would be to treat your portfolio as a real product design project and understand your audience really well. A well-crafted portfolio that effectively communicates your design process, challenges, and solutions can significantly enhance your chances of standing out to hiring managers.”