The line-up for UX London 2025

Check it out—here’s the line-up for UX London 2025!

A woman with long dark straight hair wearing dark clothing in front of a bookshelf. Studio portrait of a smiling fair-haired woman wearing a green and white cardigan with her arms folded. A smiling curly-haired woman wearing a shiny top resting her chin on the palm of hand. A smiling woman with short dark hair in profile turns her head towards us. A woman with long dark hair sitting down looking directly at us. Close up of the face of a smiling woman wearing a baseball cap outdoors. A shaven-headed bearded man with a camoflauge shirt in front of a light background. A dark-haired smiling woman wearing a sparkly black top. A smiling woman with straight dark hair outdoors wearing a black top with a sparkly shoulderpiece. A smiling woman with long fair hair and glasses wearing a black and grey top in front of a yellow backdrop. Cut-out of a smiling bearded man wearing a purple scarf against a yellow background. A smiling woman with wearing jeans and a white T-shirt sitting forward on a chair. A woman with glasses and shoulder-length dark hair wearing a necklace and a yellow top sitting down. A shaven-headed man with a light shirt in front of a black background. Close up of a woman's face with shoulder-length hair in front of a background of somewhere bright and sunny outside. The smiling face of a man with short dark hair and beard. A smiling woman with long dark straight hair wearing a dark T-shirt. A smiling woman with long dark hair in leafy corridor. A smiling woman with short blonde hair wearing a white top in front of a pale background.

This is going to be so good! Grab a ticket if you haven’t got one yet.

UX London takes place over three days, from June 10th to 12th at a fantastic venue in the heart of the city. To get the full experience, you should come for all three days. But you can also get a ticket for individual days. Each day has a focus, and when you put them all together, the whole event mirrors the design process:

  1. Day one: Discovery
  2. Day two: Design
  3. Day three: Delivery

Each day features a morning of talks, followed by an afternoon of workshops. The talks are on a single track; four consecutive half-hour presentations to get you inspired. Then after lunch, you choose from one of four workshops. All the workshops are two and half hours long and very hands-on. No laptop required.

On discovery day you’ll have talks in the morning about research, content design, strategy and evaluating technology, followed by workshops on discovery and definition and behavioural design.

On design day there’ll be talks on interface design, a healthcare case study, inclusive design, and typography, followed by workshops in the afternoon on data visualisation and ethics.

Finally on delivery day you’ll get talks on conversion design, cross-team collaboration, convincing stakeholders, and improving design critiques, followed by workshops on facilitating workshops and getting better at public speaking.

Every workshop is repeated on another day so you’ll definitely get the chance to attend the one you want.

Oh, and at the end of every day there’ll be a closing keynote. Those are yet to be revealed, but I can guarantee they’re going to be top-notch!

Right now you can get early-bird tickets for all three days, or individual days. That changes from March 15th, when the regular pricing kicks in—a three-day ticket will cost £200 more. So I’d advise you to get your ticket now.

If you need to convince your boss, show them this list of reasons to attend.

See you there!

Have you published a response to this? :

Responses

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I’ve had my head down for the past six months putting the line-up for UX London together. Following the classic design cliché, the process was first divergent, then convergent.

I spent months casting the net wide, gathering as many possible candidates as I could, as well as accepting talk proposals (of which there were lots). It was fun—this is when the possibility space is wide open.

Then it was crunch time and I had to start zeroing in on the final line-up. It wasn’t easy. There were so many times I agonised over who’d be the right person to deliver the right talk.

But as the line-up came together, I started getting very excited. And now when I step back and look at the line-up, I’m positively vibrating with excitement—roll on June!

I think it was really useful to have a mix of speakers that I reached out to, as well as talk proposals. If I was only relying on my own knowledge and networks, I’m sure I’d miss a lot. But equally, if I was only relying on talk proposals, it would be like searching for my keys under the streetlight.

Putting the line-up on the website wasn’t quite the end of the work. We got over 100 proposals for UX London this year. I made sure to send an email back to each and every one of them once the line-up was complete. And if anyone asked for more details as to why their proposal didn’t make it through, I was happy to provide that feedback.

After they went to the trouble of submitting a proposal, it was the least I could do.

Oh, and don’t forget: early-bird tickets for UX London are only available until Friday. Now’s the time to get yours!

# Tuesday, March 11th, 2025 at 1:54pm

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Previously on this day

1 year ago I wrote UX London early-bird pricing ends soon

Get your ticket by March 14th, if you haven’t already.

2 years ago I wrote The past is a foreign country

…and we’ve got its cultural artifacts.

2 years ago I wrote Like

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3 years ago I wrote A bug with progressive web apps on iOS

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3 years ago I wrote Both plagues on your one house

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6 years ago I wrote Unsolved Problems by Beth Dean

A presentation at An Event Apart Seattle 2019.

7 years ago I wrote Minimal viable service worker

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8 years ago I wrote Empire State

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18 years ago I wrote Southby

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22 years ago I wrote They. They, they, they shine on.

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