The Job Title Train Wreck

The Job Title Train Wreck

48:08 Apr 22, 2025
About this episode
This week, we catch up on Paul’s latest adventures—from a memorable dinner with Todd “the accessibility guru” where we talked WCAG 3, to a deep dive into the shifting landscape of design job titles. We’ll share an app that brings real form fields into your Figma prototypes, unpack why “product designer” is suddenly on everyone’s profile, and wrap up with a classic Marcus joke to send you on your way.App of the WeekWe’ve been wrestling with Figma’s built‑in prototyping limitations—particularly the lack of real form fields—and this week we discovered Bolt. Bolt lets you import a Figma frame URL and instantly spin up an interactive prototype complete with working inputs and text fields. That means you can run realistic usability tests without hand‑coding forms or cobbling together workarounds.Topic of the Week: Bringing Clarity to the Chaos of Design Job TitlesIn an era when “UX designer,” “UI designer,” “product designer,” and “service designer” all coexist, you might feel like you need an advanced diploma just to understand your own role. We certainly do. Let’s unpack what each title really implies, why the trend toward “product design” worries us, and how you can bring crystal‑clear definitions into your next job posting or team conversation.Why Job Titles MatterEven if you’re happy wearing multiple hats, inconsistent naming can cause real headaches:Employer confusion: Hiring managers may post for a “product designer” but expect the traditional UX responsibilities you’ve mastered.Scope creep: Without clear boundaries, you’ll end up doing support tickets one week and sales decks the next—often without the title or compensation to match.Perception gaps: Outside the design bubble, “designer” still conjures images of pretty pictures, not strategic problem‑solvers.Getting titles straight not only sets expectations for you, it helps stakeholders understand the value you bring.The Rise of Product DesignLately, many companies are retiring “UX designer” in favor of “product designer.” On the surface, this feels like career progression: a broader focus that spans UI, analytics, and even marketing. Yet we see two risks here:Internal focus: “Product designer” can imply you’re optimizing existing features and metrics, rather than uncovering latent user needs.Ambiguous boundaries: When design expands outward, it often steps on the toes of customer success, support, and even engineering roles.If your title leans toward “product,” make sure you and your team agree on whether that includes user research, email flows, or post‑launch monitoring.Breaking Down the RolesHere’s how we interpret the four most common titles—and how they overlap:UI DesignerUI designer
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