Arnold Abira
UI/UX Designer
Arnold’s passion for innovation and creativity shines through in his role as a UI/UX designer at ThreeSixty. With "Always be Innovating" as his guiding value, Arnold is dedicated to finding new solutions that make products and services usable, enjoyable, and accessible. With over a decade of experience, he has evolved from a designer to a hybrid role that bridges both design and front-end development, creating and maintaining over 500 websites in the B2B space.
When Arnold joined ThreeSixty, he was drawn by the company's good work-life balance, great team culture, casual atmosphere, and the ability to work remotely when needed. He appreciates the diversity of industries he gets to explore through his work with various clients. Arnold's educational background includes studying computer science at the University at Buffalo, as well as multiple Hubspot certifications in Design and Development.
As a UI/UX designer and Front-End developer, Arnold excels in HTML5, CSS, JavaScript, jQuery, React, Twig, Bootstrap, Tailwind CSS, and design tools like Adobe XD, Figma, and Sketch. He has a strong grasp of version control tools like Git and Subversion SVN and is experienced in creating responsive websites/applications, and scalable, reusable components. He is always staying current with emerging technologies and industry trends, and his technical expertise is complemented by his active memberships in various Web Developer groups, and WNY Business Professionals.
Over the years, Arnold has demonstrated his ability to help clients solve business problems through design in ways that leaves everyone thrilled with the results. He is fond of the saying, "There are people who find a problem to any solution, and there are people who will find a solution to any problem". He likes to find solutions wherever he spots potential problems. Outside of work, Arnold is an avid traveler, landscape photographer, a sports car enthusiast, and a linguist who speaks English, Swahili, and some French.
“Bees don't waste their time explaining to flies why honey is better than poop.” —Glenn Marvin