Design Table Podcast

Nick Groeneveld, Tyler White

Get a seat at the table and build the design career you want. This podcast is for designers looking to break in, level up, and take control of their careers—whether you're freelancing, climbing the corporate ladder, or just trying to get noticed. Every two weeks, we dive into career fundamentals, design best practices, and the hottest topics in the design community.

  1. 3 days ago

    Product Design Perfectionism: Why 97 Out of a 100 Is Not Good Enough

    Two episodes of telling their career stories, and Nick and Tyler kept noticing the same thing: the lessons that actually mattered came from the rejections, the steps backward, and the ego traps nobody warns you about. In this episode of The Design Table Podcast, Nick and Tyler sit down for a third session to digest their two previous story episodes and pull out what they actually learned. No new hero's journey. Just two designers comparing notes on the messy, non-linear reality of building a career that lasts. They get into luck and whether you can create your own, why eight months of rejection letters might mean it's time to step back instead of sending out 500 more applications, and how Tyler stumbled into web design through a newspaper ad for a trade program he wasn't even looking for. Nick talks through coaching two people at very different stages, and the hard call of telling someone their skills aren't ready yet instead of just fixing their CV. Tyler shares the ADPList portfolio-review strategy, treating mentor feedback like research data, and why comparing yourself to a 20k-follower influencer is the fastest way to feel like you're never good enough. They also dig into the "I'll show them" drive that pushed both of them forward after getting let go, why it's a double-edged sword, and how it shows up as the 97-out-of-100 perfectionism trap (the Loom recorded 25 times, the Lighthouse score that ruined an afternoon). And they close on the mental tax of staying current in an industry that reinvents itself every five minutes, especially now with AI. This episode is about surviving the messy middle of a design career, knowing when to step back to leap forward, and remembering that your only real competition is your past self. In this episode you'll learn:🔸 Why luck in a design career is mostly preparation meeting opportunity🔸 When to stop applying and go back to sharpen your craft instead🔸 How to use free mentor sessions as portfolio research🔸 Why comparing yourself to influencers quietly wrecks your confidence🔸 How the "I'll show them" mindset can fuel you and burn you🔸 The perfectionism trap of chasing 100 when 97 is already done🔸 Why hating your old work is actually a sign you're improving🔸 The mental tax of staying current as AI reshapes design ⏱ Chapters00:00 What's the difference between 97 and 100?00:43 Why a third recap session01:32 Is a design career all about luck?02:09 Creating your own luck after 8 months of rejection03:12 The hero's journey and the bright-eyed junior myth03:50 Taking a step back to leap forward04:38 Handing out demo reels and getting rejected by mail05:14 When 300 applications get you nowhere06:10 How Tyler chose what to go back and study06:44 The trade school stigma and the newspaper ad08:13 Are they ready, or just presenting it wrong?08:57 The danger of improving your portfolio forever09:47 Replicating designers you admire to find your style10:20 Progress you can't see in the moment11:26 The day-to-day of a demotivated job hunt11:36 Using free mentors as portfolio research12:45 Coaching two people at very different stages13:59 The hard call: skills first, applications later14:54 "I'm not good at math" vs "not good yet"15:28 Compare yourself to your past self, not influencers17:03 Reopening an old file and cleaning up your own mess18:15 Hating your old work means you're getting better18:43 Resilience after being let go early on19:21 Shame, rent, and the reasons you keep going20:53 The volatility and thrill of startup design21:23 Being told you can't build your own thing22:30 The itch to build your own thing23:12 The "I'll show them" superpower and its double edge24:55 The 97-out-of-100 Lighthouse trap26:53 Recording the same Loom 25 times28:47 The performance tax of staying up to date29:49 Why design feels harder than ever with AI30:18 Everyone's journey is different30:44 Get all the help you can: reviews, community, mentors Subscribe to The Design Table Podcasthttps://www.designtablepodcast.com/subscribe Resources to help you level up your design career: Get your portfolio and career strategy reviewed with a Design Table Audithttps://www.designtablepodcast.com/products/design-table-audit Download the Product Design Blueprinthttps://www.designtablepodcast.com/products/product-design-blueprint Join our UX and product design communityhttps://www.designtablepodcast.com/products/ux-and-product-design-community In need of support? Take a look at our resourceshttps://www.designtablepodcast.com/learn More about Tyler and NickTyler: https://www.designtablepodcast.com/hosts/tyler-white\Nick: https://www.designtablepodcast.com/hosts/nick-groeneveld

    32 min
  2. 27 May

    I Got Let Go Twice. Here’s How I Still Built a 16-Year Design Career

    Most product designers want to have the clean career story. First, you go to school. You build a portfolio and get hired. Then you get promoted and become a senior product designer. Post something painfully inspirational on LinkedIn about “the journey” and you're there. Cute, but Tyler’s path was not that. It started with trying to get into animation. He soon realised the job market did not care about his art school confidence, so he had to go back to learn graphic design, web design, and coding landing pages. After, he started mailing resumes like it was the stone age and slowly figuring out how to turn all those skills into an actual product design career. So… how do you build a long-term design career when the industry keeps changing every five minutes? In this episode of The Design Table Podcast, Nick interviews Tyler about his 16-year journey in design, from animation school and trade programs to web design, e-commerce, agency work, AI products, design leadership, layoffs, and eventually becoming a principal product designer. Tyler shares what he learned from being a designer who could code before that was cool, asking for raises, leaving jobs when growth stalled, getting let go twice in one year, spotting red flags in companies, and finding a role where mentorship, product strategy, and modern design work finally came together. We also get into AI, vibe coding, designers opening pull requests, why the builder-designer might be making a comeback, and why the core thinking behind product design still matters even when the tools change. This episode is about surviving the messy middle of a design career, staying useful as the industry shifts, and not letting one bad job, one layoff, or one weird CEO turn your career into a smoking pile of career anxiety. In this episode you’ll learn:🔸 How Tyler accidentally moved from animation into web design🔸 Why early career confidence can disappear fast in the real job market🔸 How coding helped Tyler stand out as a designer🔸 Why staying current matters more than clinging to one process🔸 How to ask for raises when you can actually back it up🔸 What layoffs taught Tyler about career risk🔸 How to spot red flags before joining a company🔸 Why AI and code are changing the product design role again ⏱ Chapters00:00 Why the design industry feels unstable right now02:00 Tyler’s accidental start in design04:30 When art school confidence meets the job market06:20 Learning graphic design, web design, and code08:00 Why old skills still show up later in your career10:11 Going into monk mode to get better12:13 Landing the first internship14:06 Applying for the first real design job16:15 Negotiating salary before knowing what you’re worth19:16 Struggling in the first job21:14 Becoming the only designer23:44 Designers who code and the builder-designer comeback25:39 Leaving a job to keep growing29:38 Taking a pay cut to learn something new32:18 Spotting company red flags34:38 Moving from web designer to UI/UX designer36:23 Agency work, AI, and design leadership40:30 Asking for a $15,000 raise43:03 Fighting for user research44:21 Becoming a solo product designer47:00 Building trust with engineering48:30 Getting let go after four years51:54 Updating the portfolio after a layoff54:04 Joining a sinking ship58:21 Getting let go twice in one year59:19 Finding green flags in the next role01:01:05 Why designers may need to touch code again01:03:59 What designers should do to stay relevant01:06:23 Why your only real competition is your past self Subscribe to The Design Table Podcasthttps://www.designtablepodcast.com/subscribe Resources to help you level up your design career: Get your portfolio and career strategy reviewed with a Design Table Audithttps://www.designtablepodcast.com/products/design-table-audit Download the Product Design Blueprinthttps://www.designtablepodcast.com/products/product-design-blueprint Join our UX and product design communityhttps://www.designtablepodcast.com/products/ux-and-product-design-community In need of support? Take a look at our resourceshttps://www.designtablepodcast.com/learn More about Tyler and NickTyler: https://www.designtablepodcast.com/hosts/tyler-whiteNick: https://www.designtablepodcast.com/hosts/nick-groeneveld

    1hr 4min
  3. 20 May

    How Nick Became a Freelance Product Designer Making Six Figures

    Lots of product designers dream about going freelance. No boss. No performance reviews. And you decide where and when you work. And then reality shows up. No guaranteed paycheck. No HR department. No sales team. No legal department. No one magically handing you clients because you updated your LinkedIn headline to “freelance product designer.” So… how do you actually become a fully booked freelance product designer making six figures without setting your career on fire? In this episode of The Design Table Podcast, Tyler interviews Nick about his full journey into product design. From discovering UX by accident during an internship, to losing early jobs, to slowly building enough confidence, visibility, and client demand to go freelance full time. Nick shares that he is now a full-time freelance product designer in the Netherlands and has been fully booked with design projects for as long as he can remember. We talk about design education, internships, getting your first job, startup chaos, consultancy life, salary negotiation, writing online, building a network, and the uncomfortable moment when you realize your employer is charging a lot more for your work than you are actually taking home. Nick also shares why freelancing is not just “doing design without a boss.” It is sales, visibility, taxes, client relationships, risk management, delivery, and learning how to stay useful in rooms where your future clients already hang out. This episode is about the messy, non-linear path into product design and what it actually takes to build a freelance design career with more control, more ownership, and slightly fewer surprise layoffs. In this episode you’ll learn:🔸 How Nick accidentally discovered UX through an internship🔸 Why real design work moves faster than school projects🔸 What losing early jobs taught him about control🔸 Why freelancing started as a small side income🔸 How writing online helped Nick build visibility🔸 Why joining non-design communities can help you find clients🔸 What designers should know before going freelance🔸 Why luck matters more than most career advice admits ⏱ Chapters00:00 Nick’s 11-year journey in product design01:44 Discovering UX by accident03:13 Landing the first design internship06:30 Learning more in two weeks than two years of school08:18 The shock of real-world project timelines10:43 Design thinking versus real-world design work12:00 Getting the first in-house design job16:46 Losing a job and realizing how little control you have20:02 Joining a startup as the first designer23:44 Losing confidence after two jobs ended24:19 Writing online and helping other designers27:49 Moving into consultancy32:00 Discovering the business side of design34:46 Making the jump toward freelance38:19 Building visibility and finding clients41:40 The smartest way to get freelance work46:08 The role of luck in a design career49:05 Why freelancing worked out for Nick Subscribe to The Design Table Podcasthttps://www.designtablepodcast.com/subscribe Resources to help you level up your design career: Get your portfolio and career strategy reviewed with a Design Table Audithttps://www.designtablepodcast.com/products/design-table-audit Download the Product Design Blueprinthttps://www.designtablepodcast.com/products/product-design-blueprint Join our UX and product design communityhttps://www.designtablepodcast.com/products/ux-and-product-design-community In need of support? Take a look at our resourceshttps://www.designtablepodcast.com/learn More about Tyler and NickTyler: https://www.designtablepodcast.com/hosts/tyler-whiteNick: https://www.designtablepodcast.com/hosts/nick-groeneveld

    45 min
  4. 13 May

    Why The Best Product Designers SAY LESS In Interviews

    Most product designers spend weeks (or even months) polishing their portfolio website. And then they get into the actual interview, open their mouth, and suddenly their clean case study turns into a 14-minute hostage situation. Awkward questions and most likely no follow-up after the interview. Back to square one. So… how do you actually present your design work without rambling, panicking, or over-explaining every single pixel? In this episode of The Design Table Podcast, we talk about the portfolio presentation stage of the product design interview process. The part where you’re no longer just showing your work, but proving how you think, communicate, handle questions, and tell a clear story. Nick shares what he teaches product designers he mentors, including why you should say less at the beginning, how to let hiring teams choose the project they care about, and why you should keep a few cards close to your chest instead of explaining every single detail upfront. We also get into slide decks, Loom videos, roleplay interviews, talking about failed launches, what to do when you don’t know the answer, and why portfolio presentations are really a two-way filter. This episode is about helping product designers present their work with more clarity, confidence, and control, without turning the interview into a sweaty design TED Talk nobody asked for. In this episode you’ll learn:🔸 Why designers talk too much during portfolio presentations🔸 How to structure your portfolio review like a story🔸 Why you should let hiring teams choose which project to see🔸 How to talk about results without killing the curiosity🔸 What to do when you don’t know the answer to a question🔸 Why failed projects can make your portfolio stronger🔸 How to use slide decks and Loom videos to stand out🔸 Why interviews are a two-way filter, not just a performance ⏱ Chapters00:00 Why portfolio presentations feel so awkward01:00 The biggest mistake designers make when presenting03:00 How to turn interviews into conversations05:00 Why roleplay interviews help designers improve07:00 What to do before the portfolio interview08:45 Let the hiring team choose the project10:45 Why you should not explain everything upfront12:00 Where to place results in your case study14:30 Don’t repeat what is already on your portfolio17:30 What to do when you don’t know the answer20:30 Handling weird interview questions23:00 Why you should talk about what went wrong25:45 Portfolio presentations are storytelling28:15 How to use slide decks as visual aids30:00 Sending Loom videos before interviews32:30 Interviews are a two-way filter Subscribe to The Design Table Podcasthttps://www.designtablepodcast.com/subscribe Resources to help you level up your design career: Get your portfolio and career strategy reviewed with a Design Table Audithttps://www.designtablepodcast.com/products/design-table-audit Download the Product Design Blueprinthttps://www.designtablepodcast.com/products/product-design-blueprint Join our UX and product design communityhttps://www.designtablepodcast.com/products/ux-and-product-design-community In need of support? Take a look at our resourceshttps://www.designtablepodcast.com/learn More about Tyler and NickTyler: https://www.designtablepodcast.com/hosts/tyler-whiteNick: https://www.designtablepodcast.com/hosts/nick-groeneveld

    31 min
  5. 6 May

    If Figma Disappeared Tomorrow, Would You Still Have a Job?

    Like many product designers, you’ve probably ran into one of the following challenges. One PM shows up with a prototype, an engineer suggests a user flow, or someone who has never opened Figma suddenly has strong opinions about spacing, UX, and “how the screen should work.” So… is everyone a designer now? In this episode of The Design Table Podcast, we talk about why designers feel threatened when other people start doing pieces of design work, why that fear is understandable, and why the real value of a designer is not about the tools they use. We also get into AI, vibe coding, Figma Make, product managers building prototypes, designers jumping into code, and what actually separates a designer from someone who just has an idea and a tool. This episode is about the changing role of product design and why your moat is how you think, validate, challenge, facilitate, and help a team make better decisions. In this episode you’ll learn:🔸 Why everyone feels like they can “do design” now🔸 Why Figma is not your real moat as a designer🔸 How to handle PMs or engineers bringing design ideas🔸 Why designers need to become better at pushing back🔸 How AI and vibe coding are changing product design🔸 Why your value is in judgment, not just execution ⏱ Chapters00:00 Everyone has an opinion on design03:00 What actually makes someone a designer05:00 When PMs bring their own prototypes08:00 The sanity check layer designers provide10:00 Why designers need to push back14:00 If Figma disappeared, what value would you add?17:00 Why bad ideas can still move the team forward20:00 Is the designer role actually changing?23:00 Figma Make, vibe coding, and prototyping in code27:00 Why code is harder to collaborate on30:00 The existential crisis happening across tech Subscribe to The Design Table Podcasthttps://www.designtablepodcast.com/subscribe In need of support? Take a look at our resourceshttps://www.designtablepodcast.com/learn More about Tyler and NickTyler: https://www.designtablepodcast.com/hosts/tyler-whiteNick: https://www.designtablepodcast.com/hosts/nick-groeneveld

    30 min
  6. 29 Apr

    The AI Skill Most Product Designers Are Sleeping On

    Like many product designers, you’re using AI. You get decent results by prompting and copy-pasting. Yet, you're still doing all the work. WHat if you didn't have to? In this episode of the Design Table Podcast, we talk about how designers can move beyond prompting and start using AI to actually execute tasks. Nick walks us through how he’s setting up simple workflows using Claude Skills to (more or less) automate small but meaningful pieces of work, from fixing things on his site to handling repetitive tasks. We also talk about what’s changing, how fast things are evolving, and why the real change is about giving away your work. This episode is about rethinking how you use AI as a product designer. It is a must-listen for anyone trying to stay ahead of how work is changing. In this episode you’ll learn:🔸 The difference between prompting and delegation🔸 How to use AI to actually execute tasks🔸 Simple ways to automate small workflows🔸 Why AI changes how designers work🔸 The risks of moving too fast🔸 What the next bottleneck actually is ⏱ Chapters00:00 How designers are using AI today03:00 From prompts to execution08:00 Automating small tasks14:00 The speed shift20:00 The new bottleneck26:00 What this means for designers Subscribe to The Design Table Podcasthttps://www.designtablepodcast.com/subscribe More about Tyler and NickTyler: https://www.designtablepodcast.com/hosts/tyler-whiteNick: https://www.designtablepodcast.com/hosts/nick-groeneveld

    39 min
  7. 22 Apr

    Your Portfolio Platform Doesn't Matter (Stop Overthinking It)

    You’re stuck building your portfolio. Should you use Webflow? Framer? WordPress? Maybe you rebuild everything from scratch and start over? There are so many opinions on design social media that it is impossible to know what to do. In this episode of the Design Table Podcast, we discuss why designers obsess over portfolio tools and why that’s (mostly) a waste of time. We talk about what actually matters when someone reviews your work, why presentation beats platform, and how small details like having a custom domain has more impact than the tools you use. We also cover platform tradeoffs (in case it matters), cost considerations, and when it actually makes sense to switch. This episode is about focusing on what actually gets you hired instead of getting stuck in tool discussions. It is a must-listen for any designer building or rebuilding their portfolio. In this episode you’ll learn:🔸 Why portfolio tools don’t matter as much as you think🔸 What hiring managers actually care about🔸 What custom domains tell your audience🔸 When platform choice does matter🔸 The hidden cost of switching tools🔸 Why shipping your portfolio matters more than perfecting it ⏱ Chapters00:00 The portfolio tool debate03:00 Why designers overthink tools07:00 What actually matters12:00 Custom domains and perception18:00 Platform tradeoffs25:00 Just ship it Subscribe to The Design Table Podcasthttps://www.designtablepodcast.com/subscribe More about Tyler and NickTyler: https://www.designtablepodcast.com/hosts/tyler-whiteNick: https://www.designtablepodcast.com/hosts/nick-groeneveld

    34 min
  8. 15 Apr

    This Product Designer Built a SaaS Product in a Weekend (And There's No Way Back)

    You keep hearing that UX and product designers should build. Yet, most designers don’t. Why is that? Are designers right? Is it just a case of social media nonsense? To find out, we looked at what happens when someone actually does it. Not a side project they’ll finish later (but never do) or another concept that never makes it out of Figma. It is a real product and it is live. All in one weekend. And for Tyler, the designer who built it, it changes everything. In this episode of the Design Table Podcast, we discuss just that; what actually happens when a designer stops talking about building and forces the constraint to ship something real. We get into the tools, the process, and what surprised us once the product was live and usable. But more importantly; what this changes about how you think about your career (and what stays the same). Because once you realize it’s possible to go from idea to something real that fast, you stop looking at job applications, portfolios, and “waiting your turn” the same way. This episode is about what happens when the builder mindset stops being theory and becomes real. In this episode you’ll learn:🔸 Why most designers stay stuck in the idea phase🔸 What actually happens when you try to ship in a weekend🔸 The tools that make building possible without a dev team🔸 What surprised us after launching something real🔸 Why this changes how you think about portfolios and jobs🔸 What it means to stop waiting and start building ⏱ Chapters00:00 From layoffs to building05:00 Why talking about building isn’t enough10:00 The weekend challenge15:00 Tools used to build the product20:00 What actually worked and what didn’t26:00 What changed after shipping32:00 Why this changes your career strategy Subscribe to The Design Table Podcasthttps://www.designtablepodcast.com/subscribe More about Tyler and NickTyler: https://www.designtablepodcast.com/hosts/tyler-whiteNick: https://www.designtablepodcast.com/hosts/nick-groeneveld

    28 min

About

Get a seat at the table and build the design career you want. This podcast is for designers looking to break in, level up, and take control of their careers—whether you're freelancing, climbing the corporate ladder, or just trying to get noticed. Every two weeks, we dive into career fundamentals, design best practices, and the hottest topics in the design community.

You Might Also Like