Mete Kurt

What is one thing you learned early in your career that you continue to use in your current job?

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Learning from experiences and continuously developing new skills are important aspects of a profession. I think effective communication and how it can help build trust and collaboration with colleagues is a key skill. Please share your own experiences that may help us.
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Bald_pixel
As a Product Designer, I'd say that having a good relationship with the Programmers Team is the key. Before I learned that, I used to overestimate the technical feasibility of some features I was designing, because I wasn't including programmers in design reflexions at all. On some projects, we had to initiate some major changes on high fidelity prototypes that were way too complex to code in a short period of time.
Victor Kernes
Communication is the most important skill and practice needed at any company. Without clear communication, you will experience frustration, lack of clarity, and most of all, the company won’t be successful.
Doğu Gül
@victorkernes Exactly! Communication is vital for any organization
Victor Kernes
@dogu.gul Couldn't agree more
Rakshith Ravi
It's easy to get lost in the finer details. Always take a step back and look at the big picture: Where is this all leading to? What can the customer do with this? Why do they need this? How will this all fit together from the customer's point of view?
Doğu Gül
@_rakshithravi_ Sometimes we shouldn't dive into the details. It is good to look from different perspectives as you mentioned :)
Dmytro Litvinov
That I was hired not for my hard skills, but for resolving customers' problems in IT on time and on budget. I wish more developers
Abhijeet Narvekar
Give your best to any project you undertake. Even is you feel you have done it 100 times before, prepare again for the 101 also. Learnt this when giving a high value presentation. I felt I had it all covered. But my mentor insisted to do a practice round with him that week 4 times. and when I presented, it surpeised me as well.
Doğu Gül
@abhijeet_narvekar Thanks for sharing this :) I agree that giving your 100% is important
Alex-Psico
I'm clinical psychologist and still applying the statement: I'm responsible for what I say no for what you understand or believe. It still helps in all post, comments and replies... nowadays most are lazy to read and try to understand or ask about what you don't really understand, but most are keen to refuse what you said without really got it