The Enterprise UX 2016 program focuses on four themes that tell the story of enterprise UX, sandwiched by inspiring keynotes and punctuated by an enterprise UX storytelling session.
Theme 1: How to Succeed when Everyone is Your User
Things get messy when your customers aren’t your users. They get even more complicated when you figure in the administrators, managers, field support staff, value-added resellers, and others that you have to research and design for. We’ll explore how to manage their competing behaviors, goals, needs, expectations, and definitions of success throughout the design process.
- Ted Booth (theme leader), Senior Director of UX, Honeywell
- Sam Ladner, Senior Researcher, Microsoft
- Fredrik Matheson, Experience Lead, BEKK
- Russ Unger, Experience Design Director, 18F
Theme 2: Growing UX Talent and Teams
A successful UX leader evangelizes their vision of how UX will impact the organization, and develops teams around that vision. We’ll explore how to hire, retain, and grow talent within the UX team, and create processes, tools, and programs to support them.
- Susan Worthman (theme leader), Business Design Strategist
- Adam Cutler, Design Studio Program Director, IBM Design
- Karen Pascoe, SVP of User Experience, MasterCard
- Ian Swinson, Head of Design at Speakeasy
Enterprise Storytelling Sessions
With curation and support from Dan Willis, eight presenters will tell their enterprise UX stories. Subscribe to our mailing list to find out how to submit your story for consideration.
Theme 3: Designing Design Systems
The actual work of enterprise UX is unconventional. Rather than usability testing and wireframing, you’re creating the frameworks, toolkits, and programs that support others: the users, teams, and communities that make up the enterprise ecosystem. We’ll look at how to use design to enable a wide array of people—including non-designers—to improve all aspects of enterprise UX.
- Jack Moffett (theme leader), Manager Apps Development – GUI, Inmedius, a Boeing Company
- Nathan Curtis, Founder, EightShapes
- Dawn Ressel, Experience Design Manager, Intuit
- Nalini P. Kotamraju, Senior Director of User Research, Salesforce.com
Theme 4: The Politics of Innovation
Innovation is hard. In enterprises—with ways of thinking and doing that may be decades old—innovation is Really Hard. We’ll look at how to get enterprises to “yes” in the face of strong egos, competing agendas, countless stakeholders, and deeply-ingrained (and often outdated) definitions of success.
- Richard Dalton (theme leader),VP, Head of Design, Capital One Commercial Bank
- Steve Baty, Principal, Meld Studios
- Maria Giudice, VP, Experience Design, Autodesk
- Harry Max, VP of Product and Technology, AllClear ID