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LAS VEGAS, NV – 15 novembre 2022 – SAP SE (NYSE : SAP) a annoncé, à l’occasion de la conférence SAP TechEd, le lancement d’une nouvelle offre visant à catalyser la prochaine vague de transformation des entreprises en mettant à profit l’expertise de ceux qui la connaissent le mieux : les utilisateurs professionnels.

 

SAP lance SAP Build qui met l’innovation entre les mains des utilisateurs

S’appuyant sur la profondeur et l’étendue unique de SAP Business Technology Platform (SAP BTP), SAP Build est une solution low-code qui met l’innovation et la puissance technologique de SAP entre les mains des utilisateurs professionnels, leur donnant un accès direct et sécurisé aux processus end-to-end, aux données et au contexte dont ils ont besoin pour prendre des décisions plus éclairées et stimuler rapidement l’innovation. Cette offre permet aux utilisateurs, avec un minimum d’expertise technique, de créer et d’enrichir des applications d’entreprise, d’automatiser des processus et de concevoir des sites d’entreprise par simple drag and drop[1].

« SAP Build réunit les applications de gestion les plus puissantes du monde sur une plateforme conçue pour révéler rapidement l’expertise business des utilisateurs », a déclaré Juergen Mueller, Chief Technology Officer et membre du Conseil Exécutif de SAP. « Dans un contexte économique instable, SAP Build et l’ensemble des innovations que nous lançons aujourd’hui – de notre nouveau partenariat avec Coursera Inc. aux améliorations apportées à notre portefeuille d’entreprises pour maximiser la productivité et réduire le délai de rentabilité – permettent aux clients de préparer l’avenir de leur entreprise et de tirer le maximum de valeur de leurs investissements technologiques. »

Avec SAP Build, les utilisateurs ont à portée de main toute la puissance de SAP BTP ainsi que les données des applications de gestion de SAP. Les utilisateurs peuvent facilement intégrer des systèmes, surveiller, analyser et automatiser intelligemment les processus, mais aussi créer des applications pour le dernier jalon d’innovation, le tout sans déplacer leurs données dans un système externe. Grâce aux solutions SAP Signavio déjà intégrées, les utilisateurs de SAP Build bénéficient également d’une visibilité approfondie sur l’ensemble de leurs processus, leur permettant de savoir où se concentrer et ainsi avoir le plus d’impact possible lorsqu’ils innovent et automatisent. Plus de 275 000 références de processus provenant de 4 000 clients, ainsi que 1 300 workflows et automatisations spécifiques à des cas d’utilisation, permettent aux utilisateurs d’exploiter instantanément l’ensemble de l’expertise métier intégrée à la technologie SAP. SAP Build fonctionne également avec les systèmes non-SAP. Enfin le nouveau programme SAP Builders aide les utilisateurs à se lancer rapidement et à entrer en contact avec leurs pairs par le biais de sessions de formations et de forums de partage des meilleures pratiques.

« La demande de solutions numériques actuelles étant supérieure à la capacité des Développeurs à les fournir, IDC prévoit que les professionnels s’impliqueront de plus en plus dans des initiatives visant à créer des solutions digitales pour résoudre les problèmes urgents des entreprises », a déclaré Arnal Dayaratna, Research Vice President, Software Development, IDC. « A l’échelle mondiale, IDC prévoit l’implication de plus de 100 millions de professionnels dans la production de solutions digitales au cours des dix prochaines années. Les solutions de développement low-code de SAP Build permettent aux utilisateurs de tirer parti de leur expertise dans leur domaine pour créer rapidement des solutions à grande échelle et y apporter des modifications. »

L’impact de SAP Build se fait déjà sentir : « Grâce à SAP Build, nous avons facilement construit une meilleure expérience pour nos clients, tout en réduisant considérablement nos coûts de développement de 90%“, a déclaré Spencer Cook, XM Advocates Lead chez Qualtrics, société leader dans la « gestion d’expérience ». « J’ai pu rapidement construire l’application pour améliorer notre programme de référence client, ce qui va permettre de propulser le taux de satisfaction clients.

 

SAP s’engage à former 2 millions de Développeurs en partenariat avec Coursera

À l’heure où chaque entreprise devient une entreprise technologique, SAP est également conscient de l’importance croissante des compétences et des connaissances que seuls les Développeurs sont en mesure d’apporter. A cet effet, SAP s’engage à former deux millions de Développeurs dans le monde d’ici 2025, en triplant ses offres de formations gratuites sur le site SAP Learning, en s’associant à la plateforme d’apprentissage Coursera Inc. de renommée mondiale, ceci afin d’aider les candidats à lancer leur carrière au sein de l’écosystème SAP, et en donnant des moyens d’action aux publics défavorisés dans le domaine de la technologie.

« Je suis heureux d’annoncer que SAP lance aujourd’hui un certificat professionnel de premier niveau sur Coursera. Un certificat destiné aux apprenants de tous niveaux, sans qu’aucun diplôme universitaire ou une expérience du secteur ne soit requis », a déclaré Jeff Maggioncalda, PDG de Coursera Inc. « Ce certificat préparera les candidats à des fonctions premières, et ce, dans certains des domaines les plus demandés. Nous sommes honorés de nous associer à SAP afin d’accroître l’accès aux compétences professionnelles et de développer les opportunités économiques pour tous. »

Ces deux annonces majeures, tant sur le plan business que celui de la formation, s’inscrivent dans le cadre d’une multitude d’innovations annoncées à SAP TechEd, pour aider les clients et partenaires de SAP à poursuivre les changements dont ils ont besoin pour rester performants. Qu’il s’agisse d’un tout nouvel accès Web natif pour les applications de gestion, améliorant la productivité dans le Cloud et prêt à l’emploi, ou d’innovations SAP dans le domaine des applications intelligentes, la Digital Supply Chain ou le développement durable, SAP TechEd 2022 vise à libérer le pouvoir des entreprises.

Pour en savoir plus, consultez notre guide des actualités ici.

Visitez le SAP News Center. Suivez SAP sur Twitter à l’adresse @SAPNews.

[1] Glisser – Déposer

The post SAP lance SAP Build pour révéler l’expertise métier et s’engage à former 2 millions de Développeurs en partenariat avec Coursera d’ici 2025 appeared first on SAP France News.

Source de l’article sur sap.com

As a UX designer, you get to work on creative, rewarding, even life-changing projects. It’s an industry with flexible working and countless opportunities. All this, and you get paid well too.

It doesn’t matter if you’re not a creative prodigy, or a tech grandmaster; you can learn to become a UX designer with the right mindset, a few tools you pick up along the way, and some committed learning.

By the time you’ve finished reading this post, you’ll be well on your way to designing your new career.

You can do this, let’s get started…

What is a Career in UX like?

Every career is different, but generally speaking, a UX designer works on making a user’s interaction with a product or service (normally websites) as intuitive as possible.

Just as a golf architect designs the layout of a golf course to flow through greens, tees, and holes, with buggy paths for access, and the odd bunker to add a challenge; so a UX designer creates the optimum experience for a site. A golf architect doesn’t need to reinvent the game of golf, and neither does a UX designer need to reinvent websites.

A golf architect will not design a course with a 360-degree sand bunker surrounding a tee (well, they might, but they really really shouldn’t), or a hole too small for a golf ball. In the same way as a UX designer, you’re not going to design an ecommerce site with a cart in the bottom left, a non-existent search feature, or hidden pricing.

The best thing about being a UX designer is that you don’t need to spend years in formal education to get qualified. The flipside is that if you want to be a great UX designer, it’s not a walk in the park.

Every designer is different, but some of the main traits of successful UX designers are: an enjoyment of problem-solving; good listening skills; curiosity; open-mindedness; attention to detail; creativity; communication skills; process-driven; and adaptability.

Before committing to this career path, check out a few podcasts, and read a few blog posts, to dip your toe in the water.

Still interested? Excellent, the next step is…

Getting Certified as a UX Designer

UX design is a practical skill. It’s all well and good knowing the theory, but without practice putting the theory into action no one will give you a chance to prove what you can do. So how do you get practical experience? You get certified, and there are three popular options: online, in-person training, or self-taught.

A good UX syllabus will include portfolio-building projects, tool mastery, networking opportunities, and even 1-2-1 mentorship. As well as learning the fundamentals of UX, you’ll cover user research and strategy, analysis, UI design, and more.

Option A: Online Course

Online courses tend to be much easier on the bank balance, as well as being flexible, which means you can fit them around your current job. You can work at your own pace, and in many cases choose modules that interest you, once you’ve completed the basic introduction.

There are many online course providers, including Coursera, Udemy, Skillshare, and Career Foundry.

Whatever option you choose, it is a good idea to get as broad a perspective as possible, so consider following more than one course — perhaps mix and match a paid course with a free one.

Option B: In-Person Training

This could be a university course, or a local boot camp where you physically sit in with an instructor and classmates.

This is more expensive, but it provides benefits that nothing else does. Firstly, you’ll have classmates you can bounce ideas off, collaborate with, keep motivated, inspired, and accountable. You can also get real-time, intensive coaching and advice from someone who’s been there, done that, bought the T-shirt (and redesigned it so it fits better).

Seach local boot camps and workshops, check out workshops at local conferences, and ask your local college what courses they offer.

Option C: Self-Taught

Being self-taught is the cheapest of all options. Work at your own pace, where, and when you want to. Watch YouTube videos, read blogs, garner information anywhere you can find it.

This option involves a lot of stumbling around in the dark. The biggest challenge is that you don’t know what it is that you don’t know. For this reason, it can pay to follow the syllabus of a local college course, even if you’re not enrolled and don’t attend lectures.

In reality, all education is self-taught to an extent, even the most prescribed courses need self-motivation.

Some of the most in-demand UX designers in the world are self-taught, so why not? Start exploring UX blogs like Nielsen Norman Group articles, Google Design,  UX Planet, and UX Matters.

Mastering UX Tools

Recruiters and hiring managers will seek your technical ability and your experience using popular tools from user research, to wireframing, to prototyping. When you get your first job in UX, the tools you use will be determined by your project manager, so it’s a good idea to have a passing familiarity with the most popular. These will include Maze, Userzoom, Sketch, XD, Figma, Marvel, and Hotjar.

If you’re following a guided course you should get an introduction to at least a couple of important tools. Once you understand one, you can probably pick the others up quite quickly… because, after all… they should be intuitive.

You do not need to know how to code, but understanding the roles, and restrictions of HTML, CSS, and JavaScript is very beneficial. When you get your first UX job, you’ll need to be able to talk about how technologies fit into the plan.

Building a UX Portfolio

Your portfolio is your résumé. The golden ticket. The silver bullet. Amassing a content-rich portfolio is paramount. You don’t need a real-world job to build your portfolio, and you should already have content to add from your course.

You need to demonstrate knowledge of UX tools and processes (what future employers will look for). Case studies that incorporate research, problem-solving, strategy, imagination, and (if possible) results are the best way to do this.

There are a variety of ways of building a portfolio, but the best is taking a real website, and redesigning it. Don’t worry if your first few projects aren’t the best; as long as you demonstrate improvement and growth, that counts for something.

You can showcase your portfolio on sites such as Behance, Dribbble, or preferably create your website.

Landing Your First Job in UX

Start combing the job boards to see which companies are looking for UX designers. There’s a global shortage of qualified UX designers, so if you can’t find anything you’re looking in the wrong place! Make sure your whole network, from your Mom’s hairdresser to the barista at your favorite coffee place know that you’re looking; you never know where a good lead will come from.

Some companies are looking for UX skills as part of other roles. Others are looking for full-time UXers.

Don’t be disheartened if “Junior UX Designer” positions require 2 years of experience; HR just throws this in as a pre-filter. If you think you can do the job, apply anyway, if your portfolio’s good you might get an interview regardless, and if you get an interview they think you’re worth taking the time to meet.

If you don’t get the job, don’t be downhearted. Remember: every time someone else gets a job, that’s one less person you’re competing with for the next job.

Quick Prep on Some Common UX Interview Questions:

  • What’s your interpretation of a UX Designer?
  • What has inspired you to become a UX Designer?
  • How do you take constructive feedback and non-constructive feedback?
  • Who, or what companies, do you look up to in this industry, and why?
  • What’s your process with a new project?

Good Luck!

So, now you know what it takes to get into the field, it’s time to start applying yourself to this newfound and richly rewarding career. As the great writer Anton Chekov said, “Knowledge is of no value unless you put it into practice.” So get out there and practice, practice, practice. Add and add and add to your portfolio.

To become a UX Designer, enroll in a great course, build your portfolio, network, apply for roles, and always be learning. Always be open to new ideas and suggestions. There’s a lot of leg work, but the juice will be worth the squeeze.

Featured image via Unsplash.

The post How to Kickstart Your UX Career in 2022 first appeared on Webdesigner Depot.

Source de l’article sur Webdesignerdepot

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Another excellent guide to help people to prepare for job interviews to give them the best possible chances of success and not make some common mistakes can be find here : https://www.ireviews.com/interview-resources/


Introduction

If you’re at all interested in Artificial Intelligence (AI) — and it seems likely that you are, since you’re reading this in the AI Zone here on DZone — it’s unlikely to be news to you that there is an AI skills shortage. Businesses are increasingly looking to invest in AI and are on the hunt for suitably skilled workers since traditional software teams without the experience of AI often encounter a number of challenges, as I described in a recent article in this zone.

Anyone thinking about joining the AI workforce will want to learn the subject, initially by doing some reading and research, but without committing to paying too much. But where to start? As the need to recruit skilled AI staff has grown, so a number of businesses and individuals have set out to provide training courses, books, and e-learning, and the price and quality of these vary, as you would expect. As with all education, if you commit a chunk of your time, you don’t want to find it wasted on out-of-date or incorrect information or to find that you are missing out on key skills after spending time and money on a course that promises to equip you appropriately.


Source de l’article sur DZONE (AI)