Closing date: 2nd January 2025
Salary: Up to £72,000 depending on relevant skills, knowledge and experience + London Weighting at £5319
We’re looking for designers who can bring imagination and curiosity to help bring some of the BBC’s strongest brands and shows to audiences that love them.
The BBC Studios UX&D Team is a multi-disciplinary team united by a human-centred approach, working together to design the BBC Studios Product’s digital experience. We design BBC Studios amazing digital experiences from BBC Player (our international player product) to DoctorWho.tv. Our ace team of UX practitioners collaborate closely with product, editorial and technical teams from across BBC Studios. Together we create elegant, delightful digital experiences on a range of different platforms.
Role Overview:
The User Experience Principal drives craft and strategy in our branded website product group. You’ll care about making great experiences for people and be driven to learn and grow to support this. Your portfolio will tell your story and show how you go about your design process from ideation/concept to delivery. Great UI is nice but we’re more interested in your design process – tell us your story!
You’ll be leading the UX Research and Design for a new product group that sits across a number of our brands’ websites, for example Bluey, Doctor Who and BBC Earth. You will be evolving a budding UX practice in this product area and will be able to make a significant difference in the way the product team and wider business approach the user experience. By understanding our users’ needs, the successful candidate will be able to improve the overall user experience for millions of people who visit these global websites.
Responsibilities:
This role will be a balanced split between strategic UX leadership and hands-on UX design work including:
Qualifications:
This role is advertised as part of our BBC Extend programme for disabled people. To apply for this role you should identify as deaf, disabled or neurodivergent and must meet either: the definition of disability in the Equality Act (2010), or the definition of disability in the Disability Discrimination Act (1995) if applying in Northern Ireland. You’re broadly defined as disabled under both acts if you have a physical or mental impairment that has a substantial and long-term negative or adverse effect on your ability to do normal daily activities. This definition includes both apparent and non-apparent conditions and impairments, and medical conditions such as Cancer, HIV or Multiple Sclerosis.
Please state in your application that you found this role via Creative Access.