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Good design disappears. Great design feels natural.

UI/UX design is not about making things look pretty.
It’s about solving problems, guiding users, and creating experiences that feel effortless.

Over the years, while working on websites, apps, dashboards, and products across different industries, I’ve learned one thing clearly:

In this blog, I’ll walk you through the key categories of UI/UX designing, how they connect to user-centered design, and how each plays a role in building better digital experiences.

Understanding User-Centered Design (UCD)

User-Centered Design is not a phase. It’s a mindset.

It means:

  • Designing for users, not for stakeholders’ assumptions
  • Making decisions based on real behavior, not personal taste
  • Continuously testing, learning, and improving

Every UI/UX category exists to support this mindset in a different way.

Let’s break them down.

1. Interaction Design – How Users Communicate with Your Product

Interaction design focuses on how users interact with elements on a screen.

 

This includes:

  • Buttons and clicks
  • Hover states
  • Animations
  • Transitions
  • Micro-interactions

From experience, I can say this:
A button that looks clickable but doesn’t respond properly breaks trust instantly.

 

Good interaction design:

  • Gives instant feedback
  • Feels responsive
  • Makes actions predictable

When interaction design is done right, users don’t think — they just flow.