Your portfolio isn’t helping you
May 07, 2025 12:51 am
You have a portfolio.
But here’s the real question:
Is it helping or hurting your job search?
Most designers think more projects = more credibility.
But that’s not true.
More projects = more confusion.
Especially when:
→ You dump all your school or freelance work with no curation
→ You never explain what you actually did
→ You don’t connect your work to the company you’re applying to
Your portfolio should be a pitch, not a photo album.
Let’s reframe how you build it.
1. Curate for intention, not ego
Your portfolio isn’t your greatest hits.
It’s your greatest relevance.
Hiring managers aren’t looking for the “best designer.”
They’re looking for the best fit.
Show projects that match their problems.
Example: You’re applying to a FinTech company? Lead with your payment flow redesign.
2. Speak to their world, not yours
Stop assuming they’ll “get it.”
→ Research their product
→ Study their UX patterns
→ Show that you get their users
You don’t need to say “I want this job.”
You show it by how you present your work.
3. Make their job easier
Hiring managers are tired.
They’re reviewing dozens of portfolios.
If yours isn’t easy to scan? You lose.
If it doesn’t show impact? You lose.
If they can’t tell what you did? You lose.
So make it stupid simple:
→ What was the problem?
→ What did you do?
→ What changed after?
That’s it.
4. Show your growth mindset
Most designers hide their feedback loop.
But your willingness to learn is a hiring asset.
→ Share how feedback shaped a project
→ Show a v1 to v2 comparison
→ Invite critique with humility and clarity
Growth signals value.
5. Build a bridge, not a wall
Most portfolios say:
“Here’s my work. You figure out the rest.”
That’s a wall.
Instead, end with an invitation.
→ “Let’s chat about how this applies to your team.”
→ “Would love to co-create better experiences together.”
→ “I’m happy to walk you through my decisions in a call.”
That’s a bridge.
Your portfolio is a product.
Treat it like one.
→ Who’s the user?
→ What’s their pain?
→ How do you solve it?
If your portfolio isn’t getting responses, it’s not because you’re bad.
It’s because you’re unclear.
And unclear = unhireable.
Fix the clarity, and the opportunities follow.
Reply back with “clarity” if this hit home.