One of the primary benefits to hiring a user experience designer is the ensuing exploration of the behavior, design problems, and usefulness of a new or existing product, regardless of medium, audience, or other factors.

We find the insight, the patterns, and the nuances of behavior and design decisions that aren’t always evident in requirements documents or wireframes.

Consequently, the work in my portfolio is one of two things: it is either a finished product, or, it’s a document to synthesize hours, days, or weeks of research and study.

My process is tailored to the needs of each project and depends on countless factors, some of which are in my control and others that are not.

Most of the work found here is recent; showing screenshots of web design work from 2002 is neither helpful nor relevant to the work I pursue today.

Much of the work here is simply a sample representation of what I often provide to better serve my clients. It’s not an exhaustive library of everything I do for every project, gig, or job.

I also chose not to annotate much of the work here to provide lengthy descriptions summarizing what is painfully obvious or delving into what software I used to create the deliverable. I’ll gladly go into such details over email, a phone call, or a face to face consultation when that time is appropriate.

Much of my strategy work and interface design work is confidential and protected by intellectual property and non-disclosure agreements. But what is found here is a glimpse into how I work and what I produce, and hopefully will convince you and your company that I’m the right person for your project.

I encourage you to download my portfolio to learn more about my work.

Portfolio