Guess who is hosting UXCON26 this year.
Something in the field broke. We need to talk.
You refreshed your portfolio. Updated your LinkedIn. Rewrote your case studies. Again
And the market still feels like it is speaking a different language than the one you learned.
Maybe you are mid-career and suddenly fielding questions in interviews you were never trained to answer. Maybe your team got cut and you are doing the work of three people with the title of one. Maybe you are watching colleagues get replaced by tools that did not exist eighteen months ago and wondering quietly if your role is next. Maybe you are just tired of feeling like you are working harder than ever and moving slower than you should be.
You are not imagining it. The field changed. Fast. And not everyone got the memo at the same time.
What you need is not another online course. It is not a thread of tips. It is a room full of people who are living inside the same questions you are, and the voices who have actually figured some of it out.
That room exists. It is called UXCON26.
And your host…..
Meet Jeremy Miller
Jeremy Miller has been in design since the early 2000s. He knows what this field looked like before it was called UX, and he knows what it takes to grow inside it when the rules keep changing.
Through his podcast Beyond UX Design, Jeremy has been making one argument consistently: the practitioners who last are not always the most technically skilled. They are the ones who know how to build relationships, navigate organizations, and make people believe in the work. That conviction is at the center of everything he does, including how he will hold the room on October 8.
He co-founded Edge Kase Design Co. in 2024 and has spent years mentoring practitioners at every stage of their careers. He is the right person to guide this day.
UXCON26 is not a day of back to back slides you close your laptop on and forget. It is the one day of the year where this community gets honest about what is actually happening in the field, what is working, what is not, and what comes next for the people who care enough to show up.
The community is the point. Come be part of it.



