Meet Members and Patrons

Q&A with Sergei

Meet new Members. Get to know Sergei, user experience designer.

Sergei running The UX Conference at the Design Museum in 2018 | Photo by Sergei Golubev

Please tell us about yourself...

Design Museum

I’m Sergei Golubev – a user experience designer, entrepreneur and foodie from the hidden Nordic gem Estonia, living in London since 2005. My colleagues call me “devigner” (what a term they came up with; apparently, it’s a hybrid between being a designer and a developer). I’ve been designing software for companies like Microsoft, Heathrow, British Gas, numerous fintech organisations and startups for 15+ years. For the past 4 years I’ve been running The School of UX Design https://schoolofux.com/ in London (and now remotely) offering accessible education in digital design to everyone. I really enjoy photography (you’ll find a few of my works at https://500px.com/sgolubev), cooking (stay tuned for my roast lamb recipe below), playing table tennis and travelling (I really miss the last two these days). Feel free to ping me on sgolubev@sgolubev.com and on social media (I don’t bite, yet!): https://twitter.com/sgolubev, http://uk.linkedin.com/in/sergeigolubev, https://www.instagram.com/estonianfoodie/

Sergei

Terrace of the Design Museum in Shad Thames in 2015 | Photo by Sergei Golubev

When did you first visit the Design Museum?

Design Museum

It was back in 2009 (time flies!) when the museum was located in Shad Thames. It was love at first sight. I used to visit it regularly, especially my favourite “Designs of the Year” exhibition that always brings a thought-provoking display of design projects from various industries (from architecture to automotive), which I learn a lot from and finding ways to apply in my digital design. I had the chance to meet really inspiring people – I still remember a talk by Apple’s ex-design director Robert Brunner and PechaKucha-style evening. So much food for thought… and so many design items purchased from the museum shop (I’m still deciding where to place my Vitra’s ‘Algues’ decorations set) – you got me hooked.

Sergei

“Designs of the Year” exhibition at the Design Museum in Shad Thames in 2015 | Photo by Sergei Golubev

A dream Design Museum exhibition you'd love to see?

Design Museum

That could be similar to your existing “Designers in Residence” programme, but this time – bringing the winners of the previous “Designs of the Year” under one roof. Live interviews with these designers, where they could share how they and their projects have progressed throughout years (or failed; something that’s not often talked about), hearing about the impact of their work (I often find that it’s a quite challenge to be able to effectively measure and demonstrate the value of design) and stories and experiences from end-users of those products.

Sergei

An old photo of Sergei (probably designing a website in Microsoft FrontPage) back in my motherland Estonia in 1999 | photo by Sergei Golubev

How did your interest in design start?

Design Museum

As a teenager I loved building things that solve problems for others. I started to design websites for my secondary school when I was 13–14, carrying out what they now call a “digital transformation” of the school newspaper and homework delivery process for my maths and crafts classes, which saved teachers and students a ton of time. Day and night, I was reading numerous design-related books, tinkering with graphics and HTML on my first 450 MHz Pentium III PC running Windows 98. I had a terrible handwriting not even myself could “decrypt”, so I was using my computer for most of my homework. The speed of designing and coding up a website and reaching out to so many people so quickly has been incredibly exciting for me (“Business at the Speed of Thought” title of Bill Gates’ book comes to mind). Gosh, I still got a copy of my first website optimised for Netscape Navigator… And this is how my hobby turned into a profession. At the university I was spending about 70% of my time (my apologies to the professors!) commercially freelancing as a web designer for a few companies.

Sergei

Sergei with Sir Jonathan Ive at the premier of "Objectified" documentary by Gary Hustwit in London in 2009 | Photo by Sergei Golubev

How did you develop a passion in User Experience and Digital Design?

Design Museum

Back then there was no such thing as a User Experience design or a UX designer. You were a graphic/print designer, a web designer, a web developer… an “almighty” webmaster (whatever that ‘unicorn’ term meant back in the day) trying to design something good-looking on a screen using as much available technology as possible, and then trying to find a problem for your solution (hey, it’s still happening these days too) and that’s where the problem is. Throughout numerous startup business ideas of my own, which I was implementing away for quite a few years, I’ve realised I cannot just only rely on my gut feeling for the best possible design solution, and instead do more of user research, where a more facts-based methodical design approach goes a long way – ideate, prototype, test, learn, iterate… “rinse, repeat”. UX design is an interesting mix of business needs and user needs. Quite a few designers I know don’t pay too much attention to the business side of things. Yes, your design needs to solve a user’s problem, but if it doesn’t bring profit to the company, your career as a designer as that company will likely be “game over” soon too. For me as a UX designer – seeing how my contributions to a design of a product or service help thousands of people on a daily basis, and making the business prosper – that’s what excites me and what I’m very passionate about.

Sergei

Screenshot from Sergei's Duolingo profile page

Can you tell us more about a particular UX project you admire?

Design Museum

My family is quite multi-national with everyone speaking different languages. We’ve all been learning English, Spanish, Russian using Duolingo app this year. It’s got a great user experience, making language learning fun and most importantly accessible to different ages and skills. Gamification element (with rewards, badges and leaderboard) helps a lot in keeping us all engaged (although it seems to be impossible for me to catch up with my mother-in-law who is beating us all in score tenfold).

Sergei

Screenshot of 3D Virtual Tour from The National Museum of Computing

What current exhibitions from other organisations would you recommend right now?

Design Museum

I’ve always been interested in the history of computers, from hardware to software, with my favourite exhibitions at The Museum of Technology in Vienna and The National Museum of Computing at Bletchley Park. The latter has launched a virtual tour in 3D which I recently enjoyed revisiting: https://www.tnmoc.org/3d-virtual-tour. I believe they now also run virtual guided tours with demonstrations of a working Enigma machine from World War 2.

Sergei

Screenshot of The Mandalorian gallery page on IMDb website

If you could bring only one outfit in a suitcase what would it be?

Design Museum

That’s a difficult ask… in this case it’d be that suit with a jetpack the Mandalorian is wearing – so I could quickly pop out and fetch other outfits back home at any time (although I’d probably be boiled alive in that suit if you send me to Hawaii).

Sergei

Screenshot of Detectorists series website on BBC iPlayer

What are you watching on tv?

Design Museum

I’ve been watching “Detectorists” with Toby Jones and Mackenzie Crook on BBC iPlayer – an easy-going with light-at-the-end-of-the-tunnel series. Last month there was an interesting documentary about British designers from Sir Jonathan Ive to Sir Terence Conran on BBC Two – “The Brits Who Designed the Modern World”. I also recently re-watched Gary Hustwit’s “Helvetica”, “Objectified”, “Urbanised” and “Rams”, as well as season 2 of “Abstract: The Art of Design” on Netflix – cannot recommend enough!

Sergei

What are you listening to at the moment?

Design Museum

I’ve got quite a peculiar taste (please don’t judge me!) ranging from The Chemical Brothers (what a coincidence you’ve just launched an exhibition about them) and “Café del Mar” albums, Travis and Beirut, to Max Richter and Andrea Bocelli. It’s a pity “Ibiza Classics” by Pete Tong and The Heritage Orchestra isn’t on this year. Having said that, very excited about the upcoming virtual concert of Andrea Bocelli called “Believe in Christmas” in December. I’ve recently found out about Poolside.fm – an online radio station with a great compilation of uplifting beats.

Sergei

Sergei's roast lamb | Photo by Sergei Golubev

Your favourite food and recipes? Are you good at cooking?

Design Museum

Don’t get me started on food – my Instagram account is called EstonianFoodie :-). I love cooking! So far, I haven’t had a negative review on “Friends&Family-TrustPilot” (touch wood!); only an occasional observation about using too much of soured cream (we eat it a lot of it in our culture, adding it to soups, salads and even cakes) from my Venezuelan wife. Nothings beats a hearty Sunday roast at home: here’s my recipe of a slow-cooked leg of lamb with potatoes in goose fat and baby carrots: 1) Pan-sear a leg of lamb, then oven-roast for approx. 1 hour / 160°C fan together with caramelised carrots. 2) Blanch potatoes, coat in flour, put into hot goose fat on the oven tray for 45minutes, turn over from time to time. 3) Rest lamb for 15 minutes. 4) Serve with red wine gravy and horseradish sauce. “Simples!” (pronounced in Sergei-the-meerkat accent).

Sergei

Sergei's in Kyoto, Japan in 2019 | Photo by Sergei Golubev

Favourite place where to travel?

Design Museum

Japan. I’ve visited Tokyo and Kyoto in 2019. The contrasting combination of past traditions and latest technology absolutely fascinated me. The locals were incredibly polite and welcoming (despite the language barrier). I highly recommend a robot show, ninja experience, and digital art exhibition in Tokyo. And Kinkaku-ji temple, ramen-making class and maiko theatre in Kyoto.

Sergei

Introduce yourself

Get in touch with Membership

Introduce yourself to other members, inspire and get inspired!
Everyone can be featured.
Please note the Q&A will be featured in a Members' Area of the website as a members' exclusive content.