I am an experience designer for a leading digital learning organisation. I love my job. However, with success comes notoriety and with notoriety come higher expectations. As such, our clients expect to suffer very few setbacks when having their products written, designed, built and delivered. Minimising those setbacks is an experiential designer's responsibility.
Experiential design is a nuanced profession. I began this masters in learning and development with the ambition to enhance my educational career and move into educational design, assuming the transition would come closer towards the end of the qualification. It occurred half way through. When sitting in the final interview I was candidly told by the CEO that were it down to my relevant experience my CV would be at the bottom of the pile. Fortunately, as the business was looking for motivation, creativity and a range of loosely related professional responsibilities, I was an exciting prospect. with great potential.
Alas, to this date I fear that potential hasn't been met. While I have been productive and delivered a number of satisfactory programs, there have also been others whose reception has been met with an underwhelming fanfare. You see, I've missed things. Case wars Have commenced Between Titles and sentences. Typos, like gremlins have come from the woodwork after being spilled with water. Punctuation? It desires, to-be noticed! Inconsistencies have been picked up in spelling, form and typeface, while grammar. Oh, poor, dear grammar.... What have I done?
My proofreading requires action. Swiftly. Yet managing a full workload and the pressures of life nothing but a flexible solution will suffice.
So, join me as I undertake a brief, digital, flexible program on learning better editing.
Experiential design is a nuanced profession. I began this masters in learning and development with the ambition to enhance my educational career and move into educational design, assuming the transition would come closer towards the end of the qualification. It occurred half way through. When sitting in the final interview I was candidly told by the CEO that were it down to my relevant experience my CV would be at the bottom of the pile. Fortunately, as the business was looking for motivation, creativity and a range of loosely related professional responsibilities, I was an exciting prospect. with great potential.
Alas, to this date I fear that potential hasn't been met. While I have been productive and delivered a number of satisfactory programs, there have also been others whose reception has been met with an underwhelming fanfare. You see, I've missed things. Case wars Have commenced Between Titles and sentences. Typos, like gremlins have come from the woodwork after being spilled with water. Punctuation? It desires, to-be noticed! Inconsistencies have been picked up in spelling, form and typeface, while grammar. Oh, poor, dear grammar.... What have I done?
My proofreading requires action. Swiftly. Yet managing a full workload and the pressures of life nothing but a flexible solution will suffice.
So, join me as I undertake a brief, digital, flexible program on learning better editing.