Five books to read for new UX designers

uxaaron
Bootcamp
Published in
3 min readJul 30, 2022
5 books on table

Continuous personal development for me as a UXer is a big part of what makes the role so enjoyable. No matter how much time we put into project work, there are always new techniques to try, user testing to do and content to be read.

I’ve read many books on design, research, business and psychology over the last few years but only really find myself returning to and recommending a handful.

Here are five books I regularly recommend for those starting their UX career.

1. Laws of UX by Jon Yablonski

Read it for: Gaining a better understanding of user psychology and how users interact with digital interfaces.

Jon does a great job breaking down the more useful principles for designers and provides a framework for their application.

Book on table, UX strategy

2. UX Strategy by Jaime Levy

Read it for: Gaining a better understanding of how UX design not only benefits the end user and the overall business strategy.

This book helped me with my stakeholder engagement skills and proved to be a valuable reference when I managed a large UX project with a lengthy research phase.

Book on table, Small Data

3. Small Data by Martin Lindstrom

Read it for: Martin's insights into what factors contribute to human behaviour and how cultural differences require businesses to adapt accordingly.

This is perhaps my favourite book on the list, Small Data is broken into eight stories that delve into the history of why some products and brands are so successful today. A must-read for user researchers, in my opinion.

4. How Innovation Works by Matt Ridley

Read it for: finding out how some of the world's most important developments were the result of both collaboration and continuous improvement and what lessons we can learn from history when tasked with the constant quest for innovation.

This is a long detailed read, I recommend the audiobook read by the author.

5. Universal Methods of Design

The only book on the list I haven’t read cover to cover. What this (large!) reference book provides is a detailed description of 125 methods to research problems and design effective solutions, each with examples and photographs of actual research.

I use this regularly during a project's discovery phase to ensure I’m implementing the right research strategy or discussing techniques with others.

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uxaaron
Bootcamp

Product designer, mentor at ADPlist.org and advocate for data-driven UX design.