This site is an archive for blog posts from 2011 - 2022.

For more recent posts please see my LinkedIn page.

To learn more about what I do professionally check out Lebsontech.com.

About Cory Lebson

Cory Lebson has been a user experience consultant for over 20 years and is the Principal and Owner of Lebsontech LLC. Lebsontech is focused on user research and evaluation, user experience strategy and UX training. Cory is the author of The UX Careers Handbook and is a LinkedIn Learning instructor. Cory also speaks frequently on topics related to UX career development, user experience, user research, information architecture, and accessibility. He has been featured on the radio and has also published a number of articles in a variety of professional publications. Cory has an MBA in marketing and technology management, as well as an MA in sociology and a BS in psychology. Cory is a past president of the User Experience Professionals Association (UXPA) International and is also a past president of the UXPA DC Chapter.

Getting close! A UX Careers Handbook Update

Although I announced that I was writing a UX Careers Handbook in mid-December 2014, it wasn’t until mid-January that I actually started putting the virtual pen to paper and writing the book. I’m excited to say that two weeks ago—five months and 82,000 words later—I ...

By |2020-12-04T09:08:35-05:00July 14th, 2015|UX Career, Writing|

Reflection on Meeting Myself – 24 Years Later

On a recent Saturday afternoon my kids were getting antsy, and as we watched the temperatures remain far below freezing, they turned to the bookshelf to see if they could find anything interesting.  Before I knew it, my Randallstown High School yearbook was placed in ...

By |2020-12-04T09:10:28-05:00March 5th, 2015|UX Career|

Announcing the UX Careers Book Project (Come join me!)

I am excited to announce the kickoff of one of my most intriguing adventures yet: writing a book on UX careers for Focal Press! While there are plenty of career books and plenty of UX methods books on the market, there is no one comprehensive ...

By |2020-12-04T09:08:35-05:00December 15th, 2014|Publication, UX Career, Writing|

UXPA President’s Corner Blog: A Year of Changes

When I accepted the position of president for 2014, I could never have guessed what this year had in store for the organization.  It has been quite a year: a year with some surprises and a number of changes as we assessed how and where ...

By |2020-12-04T09:08:35-05:00December 7th, 2014|Posted elsewhere, UXPA|

Don’t be a UX perfectionist. Just do your best.

In high school I was that kid that in theory was supposed to get top grades. I was serious in class, spoke intelligently and appeared studious. Yet my grades were not great – not terrible, just not what teachers were expecting of me.  The truth ...

By |2020-12-04T09:08:36-05:00September 29th, 2014|Consulting, User Research|

Recruiter FAQ: No full-time permanence but always interested in talking!

At least once a day I get a message from a recruiter offering some new job for which the recruiter thinks I’d be a great fit.  While I do appreciate knowing that I’m findable and in lots of databases of potential candidates, I am often ...

By |2021-04-26T13:03:25-04:00August 25th, 2014|Consulting, UX Career|

Teaching Basics of UX/Career Adventure: What Are The Required Skills?

Note: The basic tenants of a “UX adventure” are covered in more detail in the UX Magazine article: UX Adventure: Enhance your resume, improve your career potential, and feel the excitement!   In London this past week at the UXPA 2014 conference the closing keynote speaker, ...

By |2020-12-04T09:08:36-05:00August 1st, 2014|Networking, Training, UX Adventure, UX Career|

UX Magazine – Go Ahead, White-Label Your Services

While “white-labeling” has been associated most commonly with limited-edition musical recordings, it has also come to refer to a situation where a product or service is provided to a company and that company then sells that product or service under their own brand. For a ...

By |2020-12-04T09:08:36-05:00July 18th, 2014|Consulting, Posted elsewhere, Publication, UX Career|

Nonsensical UX: The Strange Case of an Elevator Touch Screen

My flight arrived into Boston right on time, and I smoothly made it to the hotel with plenty of time to spare before my first participant was to arrive for some conference usability test sessions.  I used the time to check into my hotel room ...

By |2020-12-04T09:13:25-05:00June 25th, 2014|Advocating for UX|

How sophisticated should your usability test participants be?

Recently I had the opportunity to do a usability test for a client that had previously used another vendor to conduct their research.  As we were working together to develop screening categories for the study, we discussed the technological sophistication of their users. They knew ...

By |2020-12-04T09:08:36-05:00June 16th, 2014|User Research|

UX Magazine – The Hidden Value of UX Connectors and the Future of Our Community

I was in Austin, Texas recently and, following the rules of UX Adventure, I took the opportunity to coordinate with some Austin UXers to meet at a local bar. On the day of the meetup, I checked my Twitter account and noticed that our rendezvous ...

By |2020-12-04T09:08:37-05:00April 10th, 2014|Posted elsewhere, Publication, UX Career, UX Leadership|

Quirk’s Marketing Research Media – What Qualitative and UX Researchers Can Learn From Each Other

Article Abstract: This article focuses on how user experience research is unique in the marketing research space and why qualitative researchers must understand the differences to succeed in usability testing. While both marketing research and user experience (UX) research certainly add commercial value, marketing research ...

By |2020-12-04T09:08:37-05:00March 24th, 2014|Posted elsewhere, Publication, User Research|

Lessons learned from five weeks “on the bench”

Since I left the W-2 world in 2008, my work flow has been pretty much non-stop with an average of perhaps 35 hours a week of billable time and another 10 hours per week of non-billable time.  The non-billable time was spent largely on things ...

By |2020-12-04T09:08:38-05:00March 20th, 2014|Consulting, Freelancing, UX Career|

Focus Groups are useful for UX research – to a point

Focus groups, often maligned within the field of user experience for not being able to get the “right” information, are actually a great way to collect information.   But as a tool, the value of focus groups is limited to only certain types of information gathering.  ...

By |2020-12-04T09:08:38-05:00March 13th, 2014|User Research|

UXmatters – Lessons from Disaster Research

When the life-threatening catastrophe Hurricane Sandy hit the Northeastern United States, proper disaster preparedness and disaster response and the subsequent recovery all depended on people having a good user experience with Web and mobile information resources. These resources provided information that helped people to prepare ...

By |2020-12-04T09:08:38-05:00March 10th, 2014|Disaster UX, Posted elsewhere, Publication|

Get out there to advance your career + real networking: a winning combination

In early November 2010, I was finishing up my first year as the president of the UXPA DC chapter and was in San Antonio on a separate user research project with the then UXPA DC VP, Jen Romano Bergstrom.  One evening, after the research had ...

By |2020-12-04T09:08:38-05:00March 5th, 2014|Networking, Speaking, UX Career, UX Leadership, UXPA|

GIANT UX Blog – UX Is Community

By definition, user experience is about understanding people in order to improve products and services. The term “user experience” is an umbrella term (not the only one, but seemingly the most popular one these days) used to encompass a variety of related career tracks, from ...

By |2020-12-04T09:08:38-05:00March 3rd, 2014|Networking, Posted elsewhere|

UXPA President’s Corner Blog: Beyond UXPA: Connect with the wider UX world

Engage with us: It goes without saying that we at UXPA want to engage with you – to engage at an international level, and, wherever our chapters exist, at a chapter level as well. Both UXPA International and our UXPA chapters have a lot to ...

By |2020-12-04T09:08:39-05:00February 2nd, 2014|Posted elsewhere, UXPA|

Tips & Techniques for UX Professionals: Introverts, Ambiverts and Shyness

I’ve lost count of the number of times I’ve heard UX professionals say that they are introverts. Sometimes they tell me directly, and sometimes it just comes up in a group conversation. At other times, I’ve heard it from speakers at conferences. Is it true? ...

By |2020-12-04T09:08:39-05:00January 22nd, 2014|Networking, UX Career, UX Leadership|

UXPA President’s Corner Blog: Looking forward to an amazing year

UXPA has meant a lot to me and has been a professional home to me for the past ten years, first at a local chapter level, and shortly after, at the international level as well. I am very much looking forward to leading UXPA this ...

By |2020-12-04T09:08:39-05:00January 20th, 2014|Posted elsewhere, UXPA|

Diversify Your User Experience Career

Investors are advised to make sure that they have diversity in their portfolio. By diversifying into multiple types of investments and different kinds of industries, there is a safety in knowing that if one type of investment fails, there are other investments that will still ...

By |2020-12-04T09:08:39-05:00December 16th, 2013|Consulting, Networking, UX Career, UX Leadership|

The Mash-It-Up Expert Review: Training and Analysis Combined

Up until recently, if a client wanted a heuristic or "expert" review, I would frequently offer a nicely formatted Word report, organized by general topic area, including a description of each issue, screen shots and recommendation call-outs. Simultaneously, I have also conducted many training sessions ...

By |2020-12-04T09:08:40-05:00December 3rd, 2013|Heuristic/Expert Review, Speaking, Training|

My Most Memorable Usability Test Participants

I’ve been working with participants in usability studies and other research for nearly 20 years now. I’ve met a myriad of interesting people: some had backgrounds or interests similar to my own, and others had vastly different backgrounds. I have learned a great deal from ...

By |2020-12-04T09:08:40-05:00October 18th, 2013|User Research|

The Value of User Research for Accessibility Evaluation

A few years after Section 508 (web accessibility of US Federal sites) became an enforceable law in 2001, government agencies were very interested in having blind users actually try out their web pages to see if the pages were accessible. I remember 2004 – 2005 ...

By |2020-12-04T09:08:40-05:00October 15th, 2013|Accessibility, User Research|

UX Magazine – These Are My People: The Value in UX Organizations

While at the User Experience Professionals Association (UXPA) International conference last month in Washington, D.C., I spent a lot of time talking with attendees. I heard all sort of interesting things there, but one simple comment resonated with me: as an attendee looked around the ...

By |2020-12-04T09:08:41-05:00August 21st, 2013|Networking, Posted elsewhere, Publication, UX Career, UX Leadership, UXPA|

Ignite Talks, Jello and Flexibility in User Research: UXPA 2013

At the UXPA 2013 conference that took place three weeks ago here in DC, I got to do my first Ignite talk thanks to Jonathan Strohl and Jen Romano Bergstrom who pulled me into a Fors Marsh led session on research methods. What is Ignite? ...

By |2020-12-04T09:08:41-05:00July 30th, 2013|Speaking, User Research, UXPA|

Staying Under the Radar: A Business Strategy

I met someone recently who is a consultant at a large organization. We started talking about our various consulting efforts, and I mentioned that I do a lot of work with government agencies. “Oh,” he said, “does that mean you are on the GSA schedule?” ...

By |2020-12-04T09:08:43-05:00February 25th, 2013|Consulting, Networking|
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