Tags: delivery

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Friday, May 15th, 2026

The closing talks at UX London 2026

When I told you about the schedule for UX London 2026, I said:

After your afternoon workshop there’ll be one final closing talk at the end of each day before we head to the bar.

These closing talks are a way of bringing everyone back into the same space after spending the afternoon in different workshops. It feels right to start the day and end the day with a shared experience.

On day one, discovery day, the closing talk will be delivered by Michael Kibedi. It’s called Whose English gets to be default?

Ben Sauer will be giving the closing talk on day two, design day. His talk is called Story before screens.

Finally, on day three, delivery day, the closing talk will be from Lou Downe. It’s called Bad services, which also happens to be the title of their brand new book!

As you can see, each day at UX London is crafted to be a distinct one-day event, but all three days also flow together nicely.

If you haven’t got a ticket yet, grab one now before the standard pricing ends at midnight. And don’t forget that you can use the discount code JOIN_JEREMY to get a tasty 20% off.

Wednesday, May 6th, 2026

The schedule for UX London 2026

There’s just under a month to go until UX London 2026—exciting!

You can peruse the full schedule if you need to decide wether you’re coming for just one day or for all three. The event is designed to flow together, from discovery day to design day to delivery day, but each individual day is also designed to be a standalone experience by itself.

Day one on Tuesday, June 2nd has a focus on research:

  1. Maria Isachenko will talk about how You don’t need more research time: You need a system that keeps research in product decisions.
  2. Melin Edomwonyi covers Validation as a UX superpower.
  3. Marley Dizney Swanson will present From insight to impact: A hypothesis-driven framework for product teams.
  4. Luisa Berta will be talking about Turning failure into opportunity.

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Day two on Wednesday, June 3rd is all about the nitty-gritty details of design:

  1. Julia Petretta kicks things off with From onboarding to “a-ha!”: Designing the moments that really matter.
  2. Andrea Grigsby has a case study called Why must things be this way? Designing with intention.
  3. Piccia Neri puts a positive spin on accessibility with her talk, The best creative brief.
  4. Hidde de Vries will explain why The future of UX is green: On the Web Sustainability Guidelines.

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Day three on Thursday, June 4th will cover collaboration and design systems:

  1. Ben Callahan will impart Wisdom from the trees.
  2. Lucy Blackwell and Alex Edwards will give a case study on Putting the user at the centre of your design system.
  3. Rachel Ilan Simpson will take us From 0 to scale: Building and transforming design at startups & scale-ups.
  4. Matt LeMay will cover why The communication of the thing IS the thing

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And those are just the morning talks!

On each day you’ll have your choice of workshop for the afternoon.

  1. Feyikemi Akinwolemiwa will cover Future friction: Horizon scanning for UX.
  2. Natasha den Dekker will help you answer the question How well do you know your users? Exploring assumptions through play
  3. Chris How’s workshop is Yippee IA: Information architecture for digital designers
  4. Oore Babatunde will help you put together UX practitioner’s code of ethics.
  5. Lucrezia Ponzano will take you From chaos to clarity: A tactical workshop for real alignment.
  6. Ben Callahan will guide you through Assessing organisational culture.

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After your afternoon workshop there’ll be one final closing talk at the end of each day before we head to the bar. I haven’t announced those speakers yet, but believe me when I say they’re going to be quite special!

UX London 2026 is shaping up to be an excellent three days of design. Get your ticket now if you haven’t already got one.

(And just between you and me, you can use the discount code JOIN_JEREMY to get a whopping 20% off any ticket price!)

Tuesday, April 29th, 2025

UX London flash sale

In exactly six weeks time, UX London is happening!

I am ridiculously excited about this year’s line-up—I can’t wait to see the talks and get hands-on in the workshops.

If you haven’t yet got your ticket, now is the time. There’s a flash sale this week: use the discount code FLASH20 to get a whopping 20% of any ticket. Do it before the end of Friday!

Whether you’re coming for all three days or choosing one focused day, you’re in for a treat.

  • Day one on Tuesday, 10 June is discovery day.
  • Day two on Wednesday, 11 June is design day.
  • Day three on Thursday, 12 June is deliver day.

Head on over to the website to get all the details and then get your discounted ticket.

See you there!

Thursday, March 6th, 2025

The line-up for UX London 2025

Check it out—here’s the line-up for UX London 2025!

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This is going to be so good! Grab a ticket if you haven’t got one yet.

UX London takes place over three days, from June 10th to 12th at a fantastic venue in the heart of the city. To get the full experience, you should come for all three days. But you can also get a ticket for individual days. Each day has a focus, and when you put them all together, the whole event mirrors the design process:

  1. Day one: Discovery
  2. Day two: Design
  3. Day three: Delivery

Each day features a morning of talks, followed by an afternoon of workshops. The talks are on a single track; four consecutive half-hour presentations to get you inspired. Then after lunch, you choose from one of four workshops. All the workshops are two and half hours long and very hands-on. No laptop required.

On discovery day you’ll have talks in the morning about research, content design, strategy and evaluating technology, followed by workshops on discovery and definition and behavioural design.

On design day there’ll be talks on interface design, a healthcare case study, inclusive design, and typography, followed by workshops in the afternoon on data visualisation and ethics.

Finally on delivery day you’ll get talks on conversion design, cross-team collaboration, convincing stakeholders, and improving design critiques, followed by workshops on facilitating workshops and getting better at public speaking.

Every workshop is repeated on another day so you’ll definitely get the chance to attend the one you want.

Oh, and at the end of every day there’ll be a closing keynote. Those are yet to be revealed, but I can guarantee they’re going to be top-notch!

Right now you can get early-bird tickets for all three days, or individual days. That changes from March 15th, when the regular pricing kicks in—a three-day ticket will cost £200 more. So I’d advise you to get your ticket now.

If you need to convince your boss, show them this list of reasons to attend.

See you there!

Wednesday, January 8th, 2025

The Two Rules Of Software Creation From Which Every Problem Derives – Ask The UXer

  1. Humans can not accurately describe what they want out of a software system until it exists.
  2. Humans can not accurately predict how long any software effort will take beyond four weeks. And after 2 weeks it is already dicey.

Tuesday, January 1st, 2019

The Elements of UI Engineering - Overreacted

These are good challenges to think about. Almost all of them are user-focused, and there’s a refreshing focus away from reaching for a library:

It’s tempting to read about these problems with a particular view library or a data fetching library in mind as a solution. But I encourage you to pretend that these libraries don’t exist, and read again from that perspective. How would you approach solving these issues?