Solving Product Design Exercises Questions Answers Pdf Exclusive Guide
⭐ Overall Rating: 4.8/5
Highly recommended for:
- FAANG aspirants (Product Manager, Product Designer, APM)
- Bootcamp graduates looking for structured interview prep
- Career switchers into tech (no formal design degree)
R - Rough User Flow (10 minutes)
Draw the happy path. No pixels yet. Just boxes and arrows.
- Step 1: Login/Onboarding
- Step 2: Input data
- Step 3: Confirmation screen
2. The Reality: Is there a "Secret PDF"?
While there are PDFs circulating on the internet (often pirated copies of legitimate books or slides from conference talks), the concept of an "exclusive" answer key is a myth. ⭐ Overall Rating: 4
Most of the "exclusive" PDFs floating around are usually unauthorized copies of "Solving Product Design Exercises: Questions & Answers" by Artiom Dashinsky. Dashinsky’s book is considered the gold standard for this topic.
If you see a PDF titled this, it is likely: R - Rough User Flow (10 minutes) Draw the happy path
- A legitimate marketing lead magnet (you give your email, get a 1-page PDF).
- A pirated copy of Dashinsky’s or similar authors' work.
- A scrapbook of Medium articles compiled into a PDF.
I - Interface & Sketching (15 minutes)
Now you draw screens. Focus on the critical screen—the one that solves the core problem. Use annotation (arrows and notes) to explain why you placed a button there.
Step 1: Clarify the problem (2–3 minutes)
Ask clarifying questions even in written exercises (by stating assumptions).
Example: For “design a fitness tracker for seniors,” clarify: it is likely:
- Who is the senior (active vs. frail)?
- One device or an app?
- Key goal (safety, motivation, social)?
Step 2: Define user personas and scenarios
Select 1–2 primary personas. Write a “job story” or scenario.
Format: “When [situation], [persona] wants to [motivation] so they can [outcome].”


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