Eunjoo Kim is a UX designer and design strategist with over 25 years of experience leading teams and delivering the latest in UX design across major global technology companies including Samsung, Motorola, Qualcomm, and Google. As an innovative and consistently forward-thinking professional, she has led the advancement of UX designs in new emerging product categories including voice assistant(AI), wearables, augmented reality, and mobile. Additionally, She was shortlisted as one of the top 18 women leading the way in wearable tech and VR in 2016, and top 50 wearable tech gamechangers for 2016 by Wearable magazine. She is passionate about humanizing technology to design for everyone. She holds an M.Des in Human-Centered Communication Design from Illinois Institute of Technology.
Eunjoo Kim
UX Design Lead for Google Assistant (Google)
Eunjoo Kim
UX Design Lead for Google Assistant (Google)
Eunjoo Kim is a UX designer and design strategist with over 25 years of experience leading teams and delivering the latest in UX design across major global technology companies including Samsung, Motorola, Qualcomm, and Google. As an innovative and consistently forward-thinking professional, she has led the advancement of UX designs in new emerging product categories including voice assistant(AI), wearables, augmented reality, and mobile. Additionally, She was shortlisted as one of the top 18 women leading the way in wearable tech and VR in 2016, and top 50 wearable tech gamechangers for 2016 by Wearable magazine. She is passionate about humanizing technology to design for everyone. She holds an M.Des in Human-Centered Communication Design from Illinois Institute of Technology.
Lecture
Future of UX
Eunjoo Kim’s lecture consisted of four parts: Wearables, Machine Learning, Conversation Design, and AI. She explained important problems and issues on each topic and introduced her practices and design works at Google. According to her, Conversation design incorporates natural, real-world conversational behaviors into the interactions between users and a system. She used an interesting example (ordering a sandwich at Subway) and emphasized how important intuition and human interaction are in the conversation design. In user experience design, the conversation design should cooperate with users to be more personal, emotional, and transparent as it’s hard to self-troubleshoot.
There is no workshop for this event.