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2 minutes with: Averie Dow

Remember those posters that were all over campus in early spring, warning you to upgrade to the new campus Wi-Fi network? Averie Dow (InfoSci鈥26) helped design them. Her inspiration? Those wet floor signs custodians put out when they鈥檙e mopping up. 鈥淲e needed a visual that was boring鈥攜et so jarring that you couldn鈥檛 not see it,鈥 she said. We caught up with Averie about her interests in design and technology.

This conversation edited for length and clarity.

A woman smiling in front of some evergreen trees.

If you didn鈥檛 experience an interruption in your Wi-Fi coverage when CU鈥檚 new network went online, you can thank Averie Dow鈥檚 standout poster design. Photo by Zo毛 Dauksch.

听It鈥檚 an honor to get to speak with the person who helped inspire those intense posters.
(Laughs) You have no idea how many people said to me, 鈥淎verie, do you know how irritating it is to have to look at that poster?鈥 And I was like, yes, yes I do.

听Well, I guess you get the last laugh. I don鈥檛 know anyone who wasn鈥檛 aware of the new Wi-Fi network. Walk me through your process.
I was involved because I work for OIT, the 麻豆免费版下载Office of Information Technology. The user experience team was concerned that people would just think the Wi-Fi was down, instead of realizing they needed to take action. As a student, I see so, so many posters on campus. So, I suggested the wet floor sign design, which is why it鈥檚 that memorable shade of yellow. Believe me, we know how it looks!

I didn鈥檛 end up designing the final poster. But in my graphic design class the next day, we had to redesign a poster we saw on campus. And everyone and their mom wanted to do the Wi-Fi sign鈥攁nd I had to pretend like I didn鈥檛 have anything to do with it.

听A graphic designer and a technologist. You must be right at home in information science.听
What I love about the info major is how it keeps updating. People will tell you about a class you took a year ago, and it鈥檚 changed so much as a result of everything that鈥檚 going on.

听Where does your interest in tech come from?听
Well, in high school, I was a Kode with Klossy scholar鈥

听Code with who?
Kode with Klossy. It鈥檚 my favorite thing. There is a very well-known supermodel, Karlie Kloss, and her backup plan, if modeling didn鈥檛 work out, was programming. As a young girl, you love to see that, right? You can be a supermodel, and you can be a computer scientist. That鈥檚 where I learned to do web and app development.

Sounds like a cool program. Tell me more about the future, since you鈥檙e graduating a year early. What are you interested in doing next?听
I would love to be on a user experience team, doing design and testing, especially from the lens of accessibility. A big part of my work with OIT is making the internet accessible for people who need a screen reader, or can鈥檛 use a mouse. I want to make a world that is accessible to people who weren鈥檛 considered when the internet was made鈥攊f everyone is online all the time, then everyone deserves to participate.

听Wow. That might be the most information science career path I鈥檝e heard.
It is! It鈥檚 humbling to design something, and then find people鈥檚 expectations to be way off when you do interviews around usability. It鈥檚 almost like a game where you have to get someone to do something without telling them what it is. And in redirecting them, you get better ideas of how to make your design more intuitive and accessible.


Joe Arney covers research and general news for the college.