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Is it necessary to draw by hand when recruiting industrial design talents?

A slightly better company will pay attention to hand-drawing when recruiting industrial design.

I'm a senior now, and I've signed it.

The companies I interviewed before paid great attention to hand painting, and many companies had to draw on the spot.

Some written tests directly give you a quick design, that is, let you design a product on the spot and draw a rendering, while others directly give you a piece of paper when interviewing: draw it.

If hand-painted well, the company can easily take it. Poor hand-drawing does not mean that it is completely abolished. You can do data flow (that is, human design, you produce specific data for production, partial engineering) or modeling. If not, you can also be a sludge modeler.

I have two classmates who are not good at hand drawing. One is modeling and data flow, and the other is sludge.

However, there is no development and no future in doing these two things. If you want to get along well, you still have to be a stylist and creative designer, which requires you to have a strong hand-drawing ability.

And now the company has the idea that since you are studying industrial design, you can't draw such basic things by hand, which shows that you are a diligent student and useless in other aspects.

Therefore, if you want to develop in the direction of industrial design, you must pass the hand-drawing test well, but it is too important to practice CET-4 well. This is my experience, I hope it will help you.