I understand that having a strong understanding of design principles can give me more flexibility and customization when it comes to building websites. However, it seems like more and more people are using no-code tools and templates to quickly create websites without the need for any specialized knowledge.
So, is learning web design still worth it in 2023?
- learn to build design systems across multiple platforms and sub-brands
- focus on your fine art skills and aesthetic taste you can bring to any project
- get better at assisting, influencing and leading other designers and product owners
But that's assuming you are looking for a job. If you just want to learn design to scratch your own itches, and it seems appealing, it's absolutely worth it. Just start learning and stop when you don't want to anymore.
Short answer is web design, interface design, user experience design, information architecture, can only help you build better products.
people mention FAANG as the high bar for salaries and it seems strong knowledge in CS, algorithms and backend rigor is a must. I have a diverse take since my background is the opposite, learned how to make websites and got into "full stack/frontend" what have you.
anyway all that to say "product engineer" is a kind of made up term but it makes a good distinction. backend rigor is fantastic for Google level businesses, but i'd argue and recommend to invest in learning how to ship good and useful products. and that easily includes (web) interface design.