Change

I’ve spent the last few days in San Francisco where I was hosting Leading Design.

It was excellent. Rebecca did an absolutely amazing job with the curation, and the Clearleft delivered a terrific event, as always. I’m continually amazed by the way such a relatively small agency can punch above its weight when it comes to putting on world-class events and delivering client work.

I won’t go into much detail on what was shared at Leading Design. There’s an understanding that it’s a safe space for people to speak freely and share their experiences in an open and honest way. I can tell you that there were some tough topics. Given the recent rounds of layoffs in this neck of the woods, this was bound to happen.

I was chatting with Peter at breakfast on the second day and he was saying that maybe there was too much emphasis on the negative, like we were in danger of wallowing in our own misery. It’s a fair point, but I offered a counterpoint that I also heard other people express: when else do these people get a chance to let their guard down and have a good ol’ moan? These are design leaders who need to project an air of calm reassurance when they’re at work. Leading Design is a welcome opportunity to just let it all out.

When we did Leading Design in New York in March of 2022, it was an intimate gathering and the overwhelming theme was togetherness. After two years of screen-based interactions, it was cathartic to get together in the same location to swap stories and be reminded you are not alone.

Leading Design San Francisco was equally cathartic, but the theme this time was change. Change can be scary. But it can also be energising.

After two days of introducing and listening to fascinating talks on the topic of change, I closed out my duties by quoting the late great Octavia Butler. I spoke the mantra of the secular Earthseed religion founded in Parable Of The Sower:

All that you touch
You Change.

All that you Change
Changes you.

The only lasting truth
Is Change.

God
Is Change.

Have you published a response to this? :

Responses

1 Share

# Shared by finnatic :thisisfine: on Friday, February 10th, 2023 at 8:00pm

6 Likes

# Liked by shaunrashid on Friday, February 10th, 2023 at 8:00pm

# Liked by Anna E. Cook on Friday, February 10th, 2023 at 8:00pm

# Liked by Ethan Marcotte on Friday, February 10th, 2023 at 8:26pm

# Liked by Aki the Conqueror 🦓 on Friday, February 10th, 2023 at 8:58pm

# Liked by Trent Walton on Saturday, February 11th, 2023 at 12:21am

# Liked by James Stradling on Saturday, February 11th, 2023 at 12:46am

Related posts

Curating UX London 2025

Divergent, then convergent.

The line-up for UX London 2025

Three days of excellent talks and workshops in the heart of the city.

Conference line-ups

Why I withdrew from speaking at two different conferences with uncomfortably homogenous line-ups.

Announcing UX London 2025

Save the dates: June 10th to 12th.

That was UX London 2024

Three magnificent days of design knowledge.

Related links

Speaking at the Leading Design Conference, New York ‘22

The presentations themselves afforded a level of candor in personal narrative unlike any event I’ve been a part of thus far. We laughed, we cried (both quite literally), we were inspired — all, together. I can’t say enough about the vulnerability and courage of my fellow speakers, sharing their stories to move all of us — forward.

This is a lovely write-up of Leading Design New York from Justin.

The level of thought given to every nuance of this conference—from inclusiveness and safety, to privacy of discussed material and questions asked, to thoughtfulness of conference gear, to quality of the coffee via the on-premises baristas, to the well-conceived accompanying online program—were simply top-notch. Macro and micro. The event organizers and team: equally thoughtful and tremendous to work with.

Tagged with

Anchoring insights: Key learnings from Research by the Sea | Clearleft

This was a day of big conversations, but also one of connection, curiosity, and optimism.

Seeing it all laid out like this really drives home just how much was packed into Research By The Sea.

Throughout the day, speakers shared personal reflections, bold ideas, and practical insights, touching on themes of community, resilience, ethics, and the evolving role of technology.

Some talks brought hard truths about the impact of AI, the complexity of organisational change, and the ethical dilemmas researchers face. Others offered hope and direction, reminding us of the power of community, the importance of accessibility, and the need to listen to nature, to each other, and to the wider world.

Tagged with

The Sunshine by the Sea: S20E08 - Harsh Browns

Research by the Sea was one of the best conferences I’ve been to in yeeeeeears. So many good, useful, inspiring, thoughtful, provocative talks. Much more about ethics and power and possibility than I’d expected. None of the ‘utopian bullshit’ you usually get at a product or digital conference, to quote one of the speakers!

Tagged with

Tagged with

With great power, comes great creativity: thoughts from CSS Day 2024 · Paul Robert Lloyd

Here’s Paul’s take on this year’s CSS Day. He’s not an easy man to please, but the event managed to impress even him.

As CSS Day celebrates its milestone anniversary, I was reminded how lucky we are to have events that bring together two constituent parties of the web: implementors and authors (with Sara Soueidan’s talk about the relationship between CSS and accessibility reminding us of the users we ultimately build for). My only complaint is that there are not more events like this; single track, tight subject focus (and amazing catering).

Tagged with

Previously on this day

4 years ago I wrote Design leadership on the Clearleft podcast

The first episode of season two is here.

9 years ago I wrote Handling redirects with a Service Worker

A bugfix for Chrome’s errant behaviour.

11 years ago I wrote Workshoppers of the world

Divide and take over.

17 years ago I wrote The L words

Oh, what a difference an Oh makes.

22 years ago I wrote Music for the masses

I’m back from a day in London where I enjoyed the closest thing a geek like me is going to get to culture.

23 years ago I wrote Nokia XHTML Browser

This is one of the best arguments I’ve seen so far for coding in XHTML-strict.