Imagine being interested in a brand. You visit their website feeling curious and excited, hoping to learn more, perhaps even considering a purchase. But after navigating through the confusing layout and clicking the same button for ten minutes with no visible results, you end up with a burning desire to dump the brand altogether and toss your laptop out the window. Sounds familiar? We’ve all experienced this before – the frustration, the unsatisfying interactions and the overall bad experience. From a business perspective, the brand in question has failed miserably at converting us from a lead into a customer.
Now let’s turn the tables and shift to the brand’s point of view. Your website/app/product is not converting enough users and you’re hard pressed to figure out why. Technically speaking, there are no identifiable bugs, and the user interface (UI) design is flawless. So, what’s keeping customers from buying?
Enter user experience, or UX, a fancy-sounding term both vital for business and confusing at the same time. User experience design goes beyond visual aesthetics or functionality and, despite the misleading ”design” term, it has little to do with your product looking good. The goal of UX is to create products that provide meaningful and relevant experiences to users, by first understanding their needs, goals and pain points. This means leading them effortlessly through each process until using your product feels like second nature.
How do you do that? Here at Zitec, we’ve employed a series of methods, crucial to user experience design, and successfully increased one of our client’s web revenue by 50% and their conversion rate by 300%. Here are these methods in detail.
A UX Expert Review can go a long way in identifying usability issues and/or strengths. As an owner you are simply too close to your product and too far removed from your customers, as much as you’d hate to admit it. A UX expert, however, has precious knowledge to draw upon as well as past experience in the field.
Expert reviews usually focus on compliance with heuristics, which essentially is the degree to which your users can discover or learn things for themselves. They also test against other known usability guidelines and principles of usability-related fields, such as cognitive psychology, human-computer interaction and much more.
A UX Expert Review provides many benefits and you should definitely consider it if you want to achieve the following:
What better way of gauging what your potential users think of your product than simply asking them? User Surveys are a quick and relatively easy way to obtain information about the people you’re aiming to attract.
However, much like any other research method, surveys have both their strengths and their weaknesses. You might find yourself reaching out to hundreds – or thousands – of people, only to realize you’re asking the wrong questions. So if you’re going to do a survey, make sure you do it right.
A User Survey is particularly useful if you want to:
Usability Testing is a method of testing the functionality of a website, app, or any other digital product by observing real users as they attempt to complete tasks on it. The goal of usability testing is to reveal areas of confusion and uncover opportunities to improve the overall user experience.
Usability testing is done by real-life users, who are more likely to reveal issues that people who are familiar with a website can no longer identify. As we’ve mentioned above, in-depth knowledge about your product tends to blind you as well as your designers, marketers, and product owners to the product’s usability issues.
Usability Testing provides benefits if you aim to:
Search-Log Analysis is the most overlooked opportunity in web UX Research, and wrongfully so. Your website’s search engine can tell you valuable things such as: what your web visitors want, how they look for it and how well your content strategy meets their needs. Search-log analysis can help stakeholders empathize with site visitors, because the data shows people struggling to find what they need. Making use of this information can greatly improve your website, since it usually highlights problems that are frequently encountered and difficult to fix without doing significant work.
By doing a Search-Log Analysis you can obtain insights and search data that can impact:
Analytics have traditionally been used to provide information regarding marketing strategy and tactics. Lately, however, more and more usability and user-experience professionals are relying on this quantitative-data source to aid in research and design. What an Analytics Review means in terms of UX is to interpret data trends in conversions, pageviews and other user actions, in order to identify opportunities and obtain guidelines for UX design.
You should do Analytics Review if you want to:
Now that we’ve shared some of our UX secrets, you can see them applied in our free case study on The impact of good UX: how we helped Romstal more than double its online transactions. Moreover, our most recent projects include the website redesign of the most popular Romanian brand, Arctic, and the new online shop for Brico Depot.
We would love to share more about user experience or hear about any of your challenges related to conversion rates. We would also like to extend an open invitation to get in touch with us if yo have any questions or just want to say “hi”.