How to keep up with the changing content design field

Check out the first two lessons from the Career Course.

Everything about the UX content field has exploded over the last few years. There’s a huge amount of interest in this fun, creative UX role. How do you keep up? And even more-so, how do you excel? The Career Course will give you the boost you need to get ahead in your career.

Take a look at the first two lessons. If you like what you see, get yourself signed up and get your career inline with your goals. There’s no time like now to get started!


A decade ago, you might have felt like an amazing content strategist, content designer or UX writer if you…

  • Considered how your work related to product goals and objectives
  • Helped create content testing plans
  • Connected the work you did to return on investment (ROI)
  • Established company-wide styles and processes
  • Communicated with executives about the work you did how it made an impact on the business

Now, these skills are often required by default.

For beginners and mid-level content designers, understanding how the job market has changed will put you in a much better position to secure the type of role you want.

For mid and senior-level content designers, it helps to understand just what the market expects of senior-level designers.

How has the market changed?

More resources for self-teaching

There has never been a better time to find free resources online for UX writing and content design.

In fact, it’s even possible to get an entry-level job just by self-study and using exercises and tools you find online (if you use them wisely.)

This one is especially important for you to know. Beginners entering this industry have more entry-level tools than many experienced content designers did when they started, so they have a great foundation. Consider delving into some of these tools and exercises to keep your skills sharp. It never hurts to keep mastering the basics.

The field has shifted in other ways, too. Content designers at larger companies like Facebook, Netflix, Google, and other organizations with mature UX content programs, are expected to show how their work impacts financial metrics and business goals. They’re expected to show how their work ties into Objectives and Key Results (OKRs).

Take a browse of job postings for UX writers and content strategists at companies like Squarespace, Pinterest, Oracle, VMWare, Airbnb, even digital agencies…you’ll see similar recommendations.

Keep in mind, understanding the general job expectations is very different from talking about specific job titles and roles.

Just know that no matter what your job title is, you should be expected to tie your overall work back to the larger strategy.

Consider what Brain Traffic and Button conference founder Kristina Halvorson recently said about content strategy’s role in UX writing:

“UX writing should not exist without a larger content strategy framework. If you are going to practice UX writing within an organization, that should not be happening without that larger content strategy framework.”

She also recently commented more specifically on what is not content strategy in UX writing:

“A voice and tone guide is not a content strategy. A content system that sits within a design system, that’s not necessarily a content strategy. A content strategy links together all those different parts of the design “machine” and in fact wider organizational functions.”

Organizations now want you to be able to create copy for user interface (UI) components like tooltips and modals, while still crafting and thinking broadly about product strategy, content reuse, and marketing goals.

There are more tools—and you’re expected to know them

It isn’t just helpful, but increasingly a necessity to know how to whip up a basic frame in Figma or Sketch, change strings directly in code, or understand how your company’s APIs work.

Also consider that tools like Strings, Ditto, and Frontitude are changing how organizations manage their in-design copy.

The good news is that you can easily start using some of these tools today. Another note for mid and senior-level folks who haven’t used design software before: don’t become out-paced by refusing to learn a new tool.

There are more remote jobs

Remote work requires independence, personal organization, excellent communication, and trust. Businesses put a premium on UX writers and content strategists who are proactive, can make sure they track the work they are doing, and can show impact.

So many UX writers and content designers only show the output of what they make, like the specific copy, and not the impact that has on the business. That puts them at a disadvantage for remote work.

More freelancing and consulting

The number of short-term contracts for UX writers continues to increase. Short-term contracts may be anywhere from a few weeks to several months. (In the U.S., they can last up to 2 years, but in general, contracts are much shorter.)

Because of the temporary nature, businesses are