Find UI/UX Designer jobs that match your specific design skills, tools, and portfolio — whether you specialize in product design, UX research, or interaction design.
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UI/UX Design has evolved from a peripheral function into a core product discipline. Companies investing in design-led products actively seek designers who can research user needs, design intuitive interfaces, and collaborate closely with engineering and product teams to ship experiences that drive retention and growth.
Design hiring is highly portfolio-driven, and job descriptions can be ambiguous — "UI/UX Designer" can mean anything from visual designer to full product designer to UX researcher. Resume-based matching combined with a strong portfolio link ensures you apply to roles that genuinely match your design approach and specialization.
Figma
Industry-standard design and prototyping tool. Proficiency includes components, auto layout, variants, interactive prototypes, and developer handoff.
User Research
User interviews, usability testing, surveys, and synthesizing research into actionable insights that inform design decisions.
Interaction Design
Designing flows, micro-interactions, transitions, and error states. Understanding how users move through a product, not just how individual screens look.
Design Systems
Building and maintaining component libraries, design tokens, and documentation that ensure visual consistency at scale.
Information Architecture
Structuring content, navigation, and user flows so that the right information is easy to find at every stage of the user journey.
Cross-Functional Collaboration
Working with product managers to define requirements and with engineers to ensure designs are feasible and implemented accurately.
Design Specialization Matching
UI-heavy roles, UX research roles, and product design roles have different requirements. AI matching identifies your specialization from your resume and finds roles that match it.
Tool Recognition
FindAllJob recognizes design tools (Figma, Sketch, Adobe XD, Maze, Hotjar, Miro) from your resume and matches you to roles requiring your specific toolkit.
Company Stage Fit
Design roles at early-stage startups (own the full design process) differ significantly from enterprise design roles (specialist, system-focused). AI matching considers company context.
Resume Optimization for Design Roles
Design resumes need to balance showing process, outcomes, and tools. AI optimization ensures your resume highlights the right mix for each specific job description.
Lead With Portfolio, Then Resume
Every design resume should include a prominent link to your portfolio. Your portfolio does the heavy lifting — your resume provides context and keywords. Make the portfolio link impossible to miss.
Show Process and Outcomes, Not Just Screens
Recruiters want to see how you think, not just what you shipped. Describe your research approach, key design decisions, how you handled feedback, and the measurable outcome (e.g., "reduced drop-off at checkout by 23% after UX redesign").
Tailor Your Portfolio Case Studies for Each Role
If applying to a fintech company, lead with your most relevant fintech or data-heavy design case study. AI resume optimization ensures your resume language matches the role — ensure your portfolio presentation does too.
Prepare to Walk Through Your Portfolio
Most design interviews start with a portfolio walkthrough. Practice telling each case study as a story: problem → research → design process → iterations → final design → outcome. Keep it to 5–7 minutes per case study.
Expect a Design Challenge
Many design interviews include a take-home or live design challenge: "Redesign our onboarding flow" or "Design a feature for X user need." Practice scoping ambiguous design problems, asking clarifying questions, and presenting structured design thinking.
Prepare for Cross-Functional Scenario Questions
"How do you handle pushback from engineers on a design decision?" and "How do you prioritize between competing user needs?" are common. Prepare examples from your experience that demonstrate collaboration and pragmatic design decision-making.
UX (User Experience) design focuses on how a product works — user research, information architecture, user flows, and solving usability problems. UI (User Interface) design focuses on how a product looks — visual design, typography, color, and component design. Most modern "UI/UX" roles require both, but candidates often have a stronger specialization in one.
No. A strong portfolio demonstrating your design process and outcomes is more important than a formal design degree. Many successful designers come from computer science, psychology, fine arts, or are entirely self-taught. Bootcamps and courses can accelerate the transition.
Junior UI/UX designers earn ₹4–8 LPA in India. Mid-level product designers earn ₹12–22 LPA. Senior product designers and design leads at product companies earn ₹25–50 LPA or more.
Figma is now the industry standard for design and prototyping. For user research: Maze, UserTesting, or Lookback. For collaboration: Miro or FigJam. For analytics: Hotjar, Mixpanel, or GA4. Having Figma as your primary tool plus at least one research tool is sufficient for most roles.
FindAllJob AI reads your design resume, extracts your tools, specialization (UX research, product design, UI), industry experience, and seniority — then matches you to design roles where your specific background is the right fit.
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