Web Interface Design Mastery

Transform your creative vision into professional digital experiences through hands-on learning and expert guidance

Start Your Journey

Your Learning Path

We've designed our program around real questions from students at different stages. Here's how we guide you from curiosity to confidence.

1

Before You Begin

What if I have no design background? Perfect. We start with visual principles that make sense to anyone. You'll learn why certain layouts feel right and others don't.

How much time should I expect to invest? Plan for 8-12 hours weekly over six months. Most students find this manageable alongside work or studies.

What tools will I need? We focus on Figma for design and basic HTML/CSS for implementation. Both have free versions that work perfectly for learning.

2

During the Program

I'm stuck on a project — what now? Weekly group sessions and Slack support mean you're never alone. Plus, peer feedback often sparks breakthrough moments.

How do I know if my designs are actually good? We use real business scenarios. When local startups request your mockups for actual use, you'll know you're on track.

What if I fall behind? Life happens. Access to materials stays open for 18 months, and you can join the next cohort for any modules you missed.

3

After Completion

How do I find my first clients? We connect graduates with Taiwan's growing tech community. Many find freelance work within three months of finishing.

Can I keep learning new techniques? Alumni get lifetime access to updated course materials and monthly skill-building workshops.

What if I want to specialize further? Our advanced tracks in mobile interfaces and user research launch twice yearly for graduates ready to deepen their expertise.

Learn From Working Professionals

Our instructors balance teaching with active client work. This means you learn current techniques, not outdated theory.

Both started their careers right here in Taiwan's tech scene. They understand the local market dynamics and can share insights about working with Asian clients and international teams.

What sets them apart? They still take on challenging projects. When Marcus redesigned the interface for a major Taipei fintech company last year, those lessons became part of our curriculum within weeks.

Marcus Andersson teaching interface design concepts
Marcus Andersson
Lead Interface Designer
Spent five years at Google before moving to Taiwan. Now leads design for three local startups while teaching our core modules.
Viktor Krajewski reviewing student portfolio work
Viktor Krajewski
UX Strategy Specialist
Former design director at a Berlin agency. Moved to Taipei in 2023 and brings European design sensibility to Asian user needs.
Students collaborating on interface design project using modern design tools

Real Questions, Honest Answers

These come straight from our intake conversations with prospective students. No fluff, just the practical stuff you actually want to know.

Will this help me get a job in tech?
It depends on your goals and effort. Our graduates work as in-house designers, freelancers, and some start their own agencies. We can't promise employment, but we do teach skills that Taiwan's tech companies actively seek.
How is this different from online courses?
Weekly face-to-face feedback sessions. Real project briefs from local companies. A cohort of peers working through the same challenges. Plus, we adapt content based on what's actually happening in Taiwan's design market.
What's the time commitment really like?
Two evening sessions per week (3 hours each) plus project work at home. Most students spend 2-4 additional hours weekly on assignments. Busy weeks happen, but the pace is manageable for working adults.
Do you teach coding too?
Basic HTML and CSS to help you communicate with developers. We're not training programmers — we're teaching designers how to create interfaces that actually work when built.
When does the next program start?
September 2025 for our fall cohort. Applications open in June, and we typically receive twice as many applicants as available spots. Early applications get priority review.