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— 5 interactive prototyping methods that work great

Good Monday, <<First Name>>. Here's your weekly roundup of UX design case studies.

5 interactive prototyping methods that work great →

[Article] [Prototype] Vasil is back with yet another great post on 5 interactive prototyping alternatives you can use to test your product ideas. I'm especially a fan of the first method called "The Frankenstein."

Building products as close to the real thing is easier than ever, using no-code tools such as Zapier, Google Docs, Slack, Webflow, etc. (Case Study Club runs on all of them.)

Designing the world of Windows →

[Case Study] [Product] Microsoft exercise transparency by sharing their design processes and establishing a solid foothold in the design community. This time they share their process of re-designing their suite of icons.

Millions of $ at risk with GDPR →

[Case Study] [Product] Luke James shares his story of making Sky Betting & Gaming GDPR compliant through design. What started as a risk actually turned out to be good for business.

Designing Learn JavaScript's course portal →

[Case Study] [Product] Zell share parts of his maker journey, more specifically, how he visually designed the portal for his "Learn JavaScript" course.

UX Design x Marketing →

[Case Study] [Product] Simone shares her story of leading the marketing team to test and design an emerging tech text-commerce product. I think it's interesting to see design processes utilized by other fields.

UX Portfolio Masterclass
Enrolment for the next UX Portfolio Masterclass opens in just two weeks (9h of March).

The schedule starts on the 16th of March and has limited spots to make sure you get hands-on guidance, accountability, and support.

This is what Chris Piedra has to say about it:
"I would sincerely recommend this class to any designer needing that bit of a push to get started and heading in the right direction."

If you have any questions, please hit reply, and I'll get back to you as quickly as possible.

Thanks for reading! Have a great week and go make something amazing. Feel free to follow on Twitter too.

All the best,
Jan from Case Study Club

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