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Kayla Wright

Sr. Designer

Kayla is a jack of all trades designer and brings 8+ years of multidisciplinary design experience to Bold Insight. She is particularly skilled in approaching her design projects with problem solving and critical thinking. She holds a Bachelor’s of Fine Arts in Graphic Design from DePaul University.

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Kayla

Your favorite city in the world is...and why?

It's an island, not a city technically, but I LOVED Kauai. The weather, plants, beaches, and ocean-life were all just incredible!

In your spare time (or if you had spare time), you would absolutely do this:

Take care of my houseplants and outdoor plants, walk my dog, go for a bike ride, or letterpress print.

Share an interesting fact or a special skill:

I hiked the Half Dome trail in Yosemite! It’s about 16 miles long and is 4,800 ft of elevation gain.

Your ultimate celebrity dinner party guest list would include…

Emma Watson, Emilia Clarke, & Jenny Lawson

Long-term personal or professional goal:

I'd like to visit every National Park. So far I've been to 5, so I have some work to do!

Favorite quote:

Work smarter, not harder.

Best piece of advice you’ve been given:

It may be generic, but not to take life too seriously. Don't sweat the small things and just enjoy the moments!

What is your favorite way to give back to the community?

I foster cats and kittens for my local humane society.
Read Kayla's bold insights

Read our team’s latest bold insights

Three things to improve acceptance of AI

To truly deliver on the promise of AI, developers need to keep the end users in mind. By integrating three components of context, interaction, and trust, AI can be the runaway success that futurists predict it will be.

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Recruiting methods and study logistics for human factors and user research

A stronger recruiting strategy that includes relationships with patient support groups and clinical treatment centers can provide better access to difficult-to-reach patient populations. Being intentional about how you plan the logistics of your human factors and user research can mitigate risks to validity introduced by biases.

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