Listen

Description

So designers are paying a hidden tax just to get their work approved.
And apparently the fix is... proving you belong by speaking someone else's language? Right...
Yeah, and meanwhile, hiring managers say they're tired of polished portfolios that hide the mess.
Well, that's gonna upset some people. Let's get into it.

The Tease

Feed: So designers are paying a hidden tax just to get their work approved.
Thread: And apparently the fix is... proving you belong by speaking someone else's language? Right...
Feed: Yeah, and meanwhile, hiring managers say they're tired of polished portfolios that hide the mess.
Thread: Well, that's gonna upset some people. Let's get into it.

In This Episode

Articles Mentioned

Community Discussions

The Take

Feed: The piece on the justification tax really stuck with me. Vlad Derdeicea points out that designers carry a hidden burden engineers don't. They've got to constantly translate their work into finance and engineering language just to get approved.
Thread: That translation part is where the burnout starts. I see designers spending more time building business cases than actually solving problems. It feels like they're forced to speak a language that isn't their own just to prove they belong.
Feed: I see it differently though. This friction might actually be a superpower if we lean into it. By forcing designers to understand the business case, we're creating a new kind of strategic role that pure coders can't fill.
Thread: But that's a dangerous gamble. If the goal is just to justify the work, the design itself often gets compromised to fit the numbers. We end up optimizing for approval instead of optimizing for the user.
Feed: And that connects directly to the thread about designers filling in for missing product managers. The industry's already pushing us toward that ownership, whether we like it or not.
Thread: Exactly. So when we add the justification tax on top of product ownership, we aren't becoming strategists. We're just becoming unpaid product managers who still have to design the screens.

Feed: Maybe the real win is realizing this extra burden proves our value in a way that raw code never could.
Thread: I hope so, but I worry we're just paying a higher price for a job that's already stretched too thin.

Announcement

Chicago Camps is hosting UX Camp Summer on Saturday, May 30th. There's an open call for speakers so submit your idea today! It's an online event, so you can join from anywhere in the world!

Tickets are free, thanks to the generosity of the community! If it's within your budget, you can purchase a general admission ticket for only thirteen dollars and fifty cents.

Get tickets now at Chicago Camps dot org.


About The Feed & The Thread

The Feed & The Thread is a daily summary of UX articles found in the industry and some light-touch updates from the UX Community found in online forums. It’s brief, and meant as a light-touch overview of what’s happening across UX.