What’s Autodesk Data Exchange?
Autodesk Data Exchange helps share design info at every stage of a project in architecture, engineering, and construction. The offerings consist of APIs, SDKs, and connectors (i.e., client extensions).
What is my role as a DX (DevEx) and UX designer?
I work on Data Exchange DX/UX initiatives for the entire lifecycle, including:
- Product design
- Provide functional requirement and detailed design for complex, mid to large-scale projects, such as computational design tools, namely Data Exchange Dynamo and Grasshopper packages.
- UI design and redesign for client applications.
- Close the gap between software specifications and implementations by creating sample apps using current APIs. These apps explore and demonstrate customer workflows, serving as a tool for the product team to engage with customers and refine requirements. This iterative process ensures solutions effectively address customer needs.
- Designed information architecture for the API and SDK documentation.
- Customer advocate
- Collect the voice of customers, including developers, for Data Exchange by supporting vanguard programs and named accounts.
- Advocate products by demoing in industry conferences, producing demo videos and blog posts.
- Customer support for Data Exchange via emails, user forums, and webinars.
- Dog feed solutions and provide continuous feedback to the teams.
- User research
- Plan, design and execute ad-hoc user research from validation testing to exploratory research.
- Let data tell the story. Our data comes from usage telemetry, community stats in our private beta portal, and one-on-one customer interviews.
- Capture user scenarios and workflows, transforming them into product and platform specs in collaboration with PMs and engineering leads.
- Recommendations focus on solving key pain points informed by user feedback.
- Product management
- Roadmap planning and prioritization for front-end related themes and computational design.
What excites me in this job?
- I find a great deal of energy and enthusiasm in the emerging realms of AEC (Architecture, Engineering, and Construction) and computational design. I studied Industrial Design in school but have spent most of my career in enterprise software GUI design; this job with Autodesk feels like the moment of connecting the dots looking backwards!