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Announcing Design for Data: The Webinar Series

by Emily True

Announcing Design for Data: The Webinar Series

Hosted by GroupVisual.io, Design for Data: The Webinar Series is all about creating products people love.

Designing success in your IoT product
Accelerating IoT product adoption through usability, insights andĀ trust
March 1, 2018
2:00 – 3:00 p.m. EST

Come hear from two renowned experts in IoT and digital product design. Hosted by Mark Schindler, Managing Director of GroupVisual.io with special guest David Rose, author of Enchanted Objects: Design, Human Desire, and the Internet of Things, this 1-hour webinar will cover how IoT companies can succeed in a competitive marketplace. The success of any IoT product rides on the user experience. See examples of innovation at the intersection of IoT and UI/UX design, and learn from companies who struggled in the market despite having advanced technology.

About the speakers

Mark Schindler, Managing Director of GroupVisual.io

Mark Schindler

Mark Schindler is founder and Managing Director of GroupVisual.io. For over 15 years, he has designed award-winning user-interfaces for analytic software products and mobile apps for clients like Johnson & Johnson, Optum and GE. Mark is founder of DVUX Workshop, which mentors startups and helps experienced product professionals learn the fundamentals of Data Visualization and User-Experience Design. Mark has a Masterā€™s degree in Architecture from the Harvard Graduate School of Design.

David Rose, special guest speaker at Design for Data Webinar

David Rose

David Rose is an award-winning entrepreneur, published author, international speaker and MIT researcher on a mission to make technology dissolve into the fabric of daily living. His popular book, Enchanted Objects: Design, Human Desire, and the Internet of Things, focuses on the future of the internet of things and how these technologies will impact the ways we live and work. Heā€™s also a lecturer at the MIT Media Lab and has worked with the Tangible Media and City Science groups. His work has been featured at the MoMA, covered in The New York Times, WIRED, The Economist, and parodied on The Colbert Report.