7 User Experience (UX) Job Titles Explained

Your guide to what UX job titles actually mean.

If you’re a creative type, a problem solver, an empathetic listener, or a combination of all three, a career in user experience might be a perfect entry point for your pivot into the tech industry.

Yes, working in tech CAN happen through more familiar tech roles like front end development or visual design, but user experience (or UX or UX design as you’re likely to see it referred to) offers a chance to work on people-first projects while still reaping all the benefits of tech’s high starting pay and flexible schedules.

UX is a tech field that involves researching groups of people who use digital products (like websites and apps) and improving their product experience, i.e., the way the product’s features make the user feel, how easy the product is to use, and how appealing users find it overall.

As you start learning about UX and UX terms, you’ll see plenty of references to UX design and UX designers. But is everyone who works in UX a designer? And do you have to know design skills to work in UX?

Well, not exactly. In order to give you a better sense of what working in UX is actually like, we’re breaking down some of the most common UX roles, what these UX job titles mean, what each job title involves, and what kind of UX salary you can expect from each position.

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A Caveat: Don’t Get Hung Up on UX Job Titles

First, a word of caution: take all UX job titles with a large grain of digital salt. User experience is a fluid and evolving industry, and UX roles and their titles vary based on what they mean to employers. One company’s UX designer can be another company’s UX researcher and vice versa. To know what a given UX job title at a specific company is really about, pay close attention to the job descriptions. That said, there’s enough industry consensus to come up with general overviews for each user experience job and UX role.

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UX Job Titles, Descriptions, and Salaries

UX Designer

“UX designer” is the most recognizable UX job title. In fact, it’s so commonly used that the entire field is sometimes (misleadingly) called “UX design.” While there’s more to user experience than just UX design, UX designers ARE a thing. So what is a UX designer job description?

UX designers are jacks of all trades in the UX field. They’re able to participate in every stage of the UX process, but don’t deeply specialize in any one function. If you’re an individual entrepreneur freelancing in UX or working at a company without a dedicated UX department, you’ll probably find yourself in a UX designer role.

UX designer duties include:

  • Participating in user research and implementing findings to create a UX strategy and design
  • Developing product prototypes and conducting product testing with technologies like Figma
  • Communicating with stakeholders about the product design process and test results

UX Designer average base pay: $116,857 / yr

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UI Designer

Along with UX designers, you might hear the job description “UI designer” (or even see them combined as UX / UI designer). No, these aren’t interchangeable words that mean the same thing—user interface (UI) design is a distinct niche in the UX field.

UI design takes the principles of UX and applies them specifically to a product’s interface (a website’s menu, layout on the screen, sitemap, form placement, etc). Because of this focus on the user interface, UI design is more similar to traditional web or graphic design careers.

UI designer duties include:

  • Designing and user testing a product’s screens or pages
  • Coordinating a product’s interface and layout with an overall UX strategy
  • Creating interface mock-ups, wireframes, prototypes, and product style guides

UI designer average base pay: $93,529 / yr

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Interaction Designer

Interaction design is a role you’ll find on larger UX teams, where each member has a particular specialization. Interaction designers work with a product’s interface, but from a different angle than UI designers. While UI designers create the look and arrangement of an interface, interaction designers focus on the user’s interaction with the interface—how do the menus slide on or off the screen, what kind of transition happens when a window opens or closes, what is the response time when a user takes an action, etc.

Interaction designer duties include:

  • Designing and user testing a product’s interaction elements
  • Ensuring interactions are consistent with results from user research
  • Wireframing and creating product interaction prototypes

Interaction designer average base pay: $110,529 / yr

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UX Researcher

Research is at the heart of UX—without researching how an audience feels about a product, there’s absolutely no way to identify and solve customer problems. Every UX role intersects with research, but UX researchers specialize and focus on the research phase. If you enjoy interviewing people, figuring out what makes them tick, and using that data to propose product solutions, UX research may be the perfect UX job title for you.

UX researcher duties include:

  • Overseeing and conducting user research, interviews, and usability testing
  • Conducting competitive analyses and researching market data
  • Creating user personas, user journey maps, usability tests, and surveys/questionnaires

UX researcher average base pay: $86,114 / yr

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Information Architect

Information architecture (IA) sounds intense, but the job description is actually pretty straightforward. It’s simply the process of arranging apps, websites, software, printed materials, and even physical spaces in ways that makes them understandable and easy to navigate.

Signs pointing to where you need to go in a parking lot, the arrangement of columns in a magazine, or the flow of a menu on a webpage are all examples of IA. Information architects then are the people who—based on the findings of UX researchers—decide how to arrange a product’s information in the most user-friendly way possible.

Information architecture is also a great example of how UX overlaps with other fields like digital marketing. IA isn’t too far removed from (and uses similar skills to) the content strategy phase of content marketing. Like a content strategist, an information architect organizes content (in this case user research and product features) to maximize their intended effect.

Information architect duties include:

  • Creating site maps, user journey maps, user flows, wireframes, and product navigation schemes
  • Participating in user research and interviews
  • Managing data models based on user research

Information architect average base pay: $126,002 / yr

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UX Engineer

A UX engineer is really another name for a front end developer working on a UX team. The UX engineer job description includes using technical skills to make working product prototypes. These prototypes are based on concepts developed by UX researchers and UX designers. UX engineers are also able to advise their team whether or not the ideas they have are technically feasible.

UX engineer duties include:

  • Using programming languages like HTML, CSS, and JavaScript to turn visual designs into working prototypes
  • Implementing interaction and motion designs into product prototypes
  • Providing technical advice and assistance to UX teams

UX engineer average base pay: $137,327 / yr

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UX Job Boards

Now that you know more about each of these UX jobs, where can you actually find them? Along with general job sites like Indeed and Glassdoor, here are 7 UX job boards you can keep an eye on to find the perfect job for you.

1. UXPA Job Bank

The User Experience Professionals Association Job Bank maintains an updated list of UX job listings.

2. UX Jobs Board

UX Jobs Board is a dedicated UX job site that also allows users to create a profile and connect with companies that are hiring.

3. Dribbble

Dribbble’s jobs board caters to design roles of all types, and that includes plenty of listings for UX and UI designer jobs.

4. UX Design Jobs

If you’re looking for UX designer jobs, you could do worse than heading to a site called UX Design Jobs. All UX jobs here, all the time.

5. Authentic Jobs

Authentic Jobs is a tech-related job site with a healthy UX and UX designer jobs presence.

6. Coroflot

Coro-what? COROFLOT. Yes, this venerable design site has its own jobs section, including listings for UX and UI jobs.

7. Krop

If you’re looking for creative jobs, Krop’s jobs board has you covered. And it doesn’t get more creative than UX designer jobs.

You’re still here! Which means you’re probably ready to get serious about this whole UX thing.

Interest and commitment is a big step, so congratulations! But now it’s time to take the next one: consider signing up for our Skillcrush User Experience Designer Course today, and you’ll be well on your way to a high paying, flexible, creative career in UX!

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Scott Morris

Scott Morris is Skillcrush's staff writer and content producer. Like all the members of Skillcrush's team, he works remotely (in his case from Napa, CA). He believes that content that's worth reading (and that your audience can find!) creates brands that people follow. He's experienced writing on topics including jobs and technology, digital marketing, career pivots, gender equity, parenting, and popular culture. Before starting his career as a writer and content marketer, he spent 10 years as a full-time parent to his daughters Veronica and Athena.