Our story
Layvionit was created for a simple but deeply personal reason: our team wanted to build a learning space where UI/UX is explained not through loud claims, but through careful thinking, structure, and work with real user situations. The idea behind the course began with the experience of Grigorijs Jusko, an Authentication Flow Designer who has spent many years working with sign-in journeys, identity checks, action confirmations, and protective screens in digital services.

At the beginning of his work, Grigorijs often noticed the same issue: even a visually polished interface could create confusion when the user did not understand what would happen next. Sign-in forms, confirmation screens, error messages, settings pages, and verification steps could look clean while still feeling difficult to follow. This became his personal challenge: to design not just screens, but calm and consistent flows where every action has a clear explanation.
Over time, Grigorijs understood that many UI/UX learners do not lack motivation; they often lack a clear learning system. They see polished layouts, but they do not always understand how page structure, user behavior, button text, error messages, and the next step are connected. This is why the Layvionit team created this course: to help learners study UI/UX through sequence, analysis, scenarios, and practical exercises.

Grigorijs has more than 4 years of experience in digital interfaces, with a focus on authentication flow design, privacy experience, form logic, secure onboarding, and user scenario mapping. He has worked with learning services, financial tools, internal business dashboards, account management systems, and services where identity checks, permissions, messages, and user actions matter. In his work, he helped teams review complex sign-in journeys, simplify form structure, improve hint text, and create clearer transitions between steps.
His previous work includes designing registration screens, data verification flows, action confirmation steps, account recovery pages, privacy settings, and pages with system messages. Grigorijs has also helped prepare internal learning materials for design, support, and user experience research teams. Through these materials, he helped specialists better understand how wording, block order, element states, and messages shape the way an interface is understood.
Across his years of work, Grigorijs has led learning sessions and practical reviews for more than 1,200 learners, junior designers, digital project coordinators, and specialists working with user scenarios. His approach is built around calm explanation: first the user task, then the structure, then the text, then the visual order, and only after that, the review of the decision.
Layvionit continues this philosophy. We created this course not to present one ready path for everyone, but to provide structured materials for careful learning. Our mission is to help people study UI/UX as a language of clear interaction: through screens, scenarios, errors, hints, components, and decisions that can be explained. We believe meaningful learning does not begin with loud words. It begins with a careful question: “What should the user understand at this moment?”