Stop creating websites that frustrate users. Learn how to design web interfaces that people understand, enjoy using, and keep coming back to.
Explore Our ProgramsMost web design courses teach you to make pretty pictures. We teach you to solve actual problems. When someone visits a website, they're trying to accomplish something specific — buy a product, find information, or complete a task.
Our approach focuses on understanding user behavior first, then building interfaces that guide people naturally toward their goals. You'll learn through hands-on projects with real businesses, not fictional case studies.
By the time you finish our program, you'll know how to research user needs, test your designs with real people, and create interfaces that work across different devices and accessibility requirements.
Choose the learning approach that fits your schedule and experience level. Each path covers the same core skills but adapts to different learning preferences.
Perfect for working professionals who want to upgrade their skills without taking time off.
Structured learning that fits around your current commitments and responsibilities.
Immersive experience for those ready to make interface design their primary focus.
Program Director
15 years designing interfaces for Thai and international markets. Former lead designer at three Bangkok tech startups.
After reviewing hundreds of portfolio submissions, I've noticed a pattern. Many designers can create beautiful mockups, but their interfaces don't actually help users accomplish tasks efficiently.
The problem isn't talent or creativity — it's that most training programs focus on visual aesthetics without teaching the underlying psychology of how people interact with digital interfaces. They skip the research phase and jump straight to wireframes.
"Good interface design is invisible. Users should focus on their goals, not figure out how your website works. That's the mindset shift we help students make."
In our program, you'll spend significant time observing how real users interact with websites and apps. You'll learn to identify friction points and design solutions that feel natural and intuitive. This research-first approach is what separates effective designers from those who just make things look nice.
We also cover practical skills that many programs ignore — how to work with developers, present design decisions to stakeholders, and iterate based on user feedback. These collaboration skills are just as important as your design abilities.