User Experience and Conversion Rates

Explore top LinkedIn content from expert professionals.

  • View profile for Vitaly Friedman
    Vitaly Friedman Vitaly Friedman is an Influencer

    Practical insights for better UX • Running “Measure UX” and “Design Patterns For AI” • Founder of SmashingMag • Speaker • Loves writing, checklists and running workshops on UX. 🍣

    226,052 followers

    ✍️ Golden Rules For UX Writing. With practical guidelines on how to avoid confusion and help people understand better ↓ ✅ Always write with respect, for people as smart as you. ✅ Write mobile-first: short, plain language, bite-sized chunks. ✅ Decide what to say, then find the shortest way to say it. 🚫 Avoid long buttons: use 2–4 words, max. 25 characters. 🚫 Avoid long links: at least 8 chars, max. 8 words (55 chars). ✅ Use sentence case by default, Title Case only for headings. ✅ Use progress anchors for long forms: “Next: Payment details”. 🚫 Don’t use placeholders as replacement for labels or hints. 🚫 Don’t hide critical details or guidelines behind a tooltip. 🚫 Don’t hide frequently used filters/nav behind a button. ✅ Front-load keywords in headings and text summary. ✅ Make people hunt for destructive buttons to avoid mistakes. ✅ Leave room for translation. Expect your text to grow by 40%. 🚫 Avoid more than 20 words/sentence, 50 words/paragraph. 🚫 Never mix 2+ type treatments (color, bold, indents, italic). Good writing is an incredible opportunity. Not only to help people get work done faster and with confidence, but also to build a strong and lasting relationships. To be charming when users get started. To help without a fuss when things go wrong. To show respect and sincerity, but also understanding and care when it’s needed. One little technique that has helped me is to imagine a real person speaking to the customer before I choose words to communicate something to them. I think about how they speak — from voice and tone to speed and intonation. How casual or formal they are dressed. What their personality is. And, most importantly, what traits, values, beliefs and principles they uphold. A product then needs to match that personality, and adapt tone based on user’s context. Once we have it, we write down all the questions users might have. We re-arrange them in order of importance and severity. We decide what to say, and find the shortest way to say it. And then we test, by reading out a piece of content loud. And if it doesn’t sound right, it doesn’t read right either. ✤ Content Design in Design Systems Atlassian: https://lnkd.in/eGpzQqm4 Amplitude: https://lnkd.in/eaB85T7n 👍 DHL: https://lnkd.in/eF494fkT 👍 Duolingo: https://lnkd.in/egCSX9At Girlguiding: https://lnkd.in/eZ8zMyC3 👍 Gov.uk: https://lnkd.in/ekRadXad Intuit: https://lnkd.in/eGyBUrZ2 👍 JSTOR: https://lnkd.in/eAnyrtcu 👍 MetLife: https://lnkd.in/evVE8sqf Progressive’s: https://lnkd.in/evx_8bzY 👍 Shopify: https://lnkd.in/eAKgEHNW Skrill: https://lnkd.in/e2HGTq4q 👍 Zendesk: https://lnkd.in/euxijT5m 👍 Wise: https://lnkd.in/eWk-Mvf9 ✤ Books – Strategic Writing for UX, by Torrey Podmajersky – Content Design, by Sarah Winters – Nicely Said, by Nicole Fenton, Kate Kiefer Lee – Everybody Writes, by Ann Handley – Conversational Design by Erika Hall – Writing Is Designing, by Michael Metts, Andy Welfle ✏️ [continues in the comments ↓ ] #ux #writing

  • View profile for Stuti Kathuria

    Rethinking how brands convert | CRO (Conversion Rate Optimisation) + UX Design | 7 Years · 200+ Brands · Global Clients

    38,922 followers

    4 out of 5 CRO agencies I've worked with usually relied on 'best practices' to increase conversion rate. These practices include: - Adding badges like 'few left', 'bestseller' - Making reviews more prominent - Creating urgency with timers - Adding key product USPs - Leveraging offers While these strategies do give results, many tend to overlook a critical aspect. Which is UX/UI design. That’s likely the least spoken topic at a CRO agency. Despite its significant potential to increase conversion rates. In this example, using Nourish You India's PDP, I've implemented UX/UI and other changes that can increase conversion rates. Below are the 8 changes I recommend a/b testing - 1. Move the product name above the product image along with reviews+price. That way, the space between the images and the add-to-cart CTA is reduced, increasing the chances of adding to cart. 2. The primary product image should highlight key USPs. This would help the user to quickly understand why to buy this product and why from you. 3. Consider adding product image thumbnails. If your product requires education then use the image slider to provide that. Most important in consumables, personal care industry, and tech. 4. Consider adding 3 quick bullet points or USPs about the product before the user goes to add to cart. This way, they are educated about the product before they consciously think about purchasing from you. 5. Motivate users to add more quantity, increasing the AOV. Do this by highlighting savings when they buy in bulk or highlighting the cost per item if they buy a bundle. 6. Optimize the area around the add-to-cart CTA. Highlight the estimated delivery time, free shipping threshold and return policy. 7. Highlight key USPs to differentiate your product and brand from the others. 8. Add accordions that the user can click on to read more. This way they can find the answers to their questions quickly. Other 2 CRO changes I did: 1. Added 'Few left' once the user selected the pack they want to buy. This creates urgency. 2. Re-iterated price near the pack selection so the user doesn't have to scroll back up to see the price. Success lies in attention to detail. Found this useful? Let me know in the comments! P.S. The learning curve for UX/UI design is quite different from that of CRO. Some great resources to explore are Baymard Institute and Nielsen Norman Group to get started. #conversionrateoptimization #uxdesign

  • View profile for Mansour Al-Ajmi
    Mansour Al-Ajmi Mansour Al-Ajmi is an Influencer

    CEO at X-Shift Saudi Arabia

    26,897 followers

    Despite heavy investments in digital tools, many organizations still struggle to deliver seamless customer journeys. Too often, brands assume that having a chatbot, a responsive website, or a few digital touchpoints means they’ve mastered omnichannel. But customers think otherwise, and they’re not shy about voicing their frustrations. But each one of the complaints highlights a missed opportunity to connect, resolve, and build trust. The good news, however, is that we’ve entered the era of Agentic AI, where intelligent systems go beyond just reacting. They think, plan, and act on their own. Unlike traditional AI, they’re aware of the context, goal-oriented, and capable of handling real-time interactions across different channels. These systems learn from behavior, anticipate needs, and continuously improve experiences, bringing us closer than ever to truly seamless, human-like customer journeys. But technology alone isn’t the answer. Transformation occurs when you combine Agentic AI, customer intent, and data within a unified, intelligent framework. So, how can organizations close the omnichannel gap and elevate customer experience? 1. Start by listening. Most companies overestimate how “connected” their channels are. Use real customer feedback and journey mapping to uncover friction points and blind spots. 2. Use Agentic AI to unify, not just automate. The new generation of AI can understand context, remember customer history, and act across channels, delivering personalized, human-like support without starting from scratch every time. 3. Think experience, not channels. Omnichannel isn’t about being everywhere; it’s about being seamless everywhere. Agentic AI allows you to break silos between sales, service, and support in real-time. 4. Invest in ecosystem intelligence. From product availability to delivery to CX, every part of your system must speak the same language. That’s when AI goes from reactive to proactive. At X-Shift we help organizations across sectors harness Agentic AI and next-gen digital tools to: ■ Deliver real-time, context-aware support that feels human because it’s built to understand. ■ Connect online and offline journeys so your customer never feels like they’re starting over. ■ Design predictive experiences, using AI to solve problems before they’re voiced. ■ Create adaptive strategies, powered by data and feedback loops, to keep evolving with the customer. ■ Build scalable digital frameworks that integrate legacy systems with new-age tech. With Saudi Arabia emerging as a regional leader in AI readiness and digital infrastructure, there’s never been a better time to go beyond surface-level automation and build intelligent, frictionless customer experiences that actually work. #AI #AgenticAI #Omnichannels #CX #Customer

  • View profile for Vanhishikha Bhargava

    Founder, Contensify | Search Visibility for B2B SaaS (SEO + AI + Distribution) | Driving Pipeline, Not Traffic | 100+ brands across USA • UK • UAE • Singapore

    20,592 followers

    SaaS companies, stop overcomplicating your content. Yes, you’re creating an advanced solution. But if you can’t explain it simply – your customers won’t understand it. And what happens when they don’t get it? 👉 Confusion 👉 Frustration 👉 No conversions Here’s the fix: 1/ Break it down Use everyday language. And when things get technical, try: • Give an example – Walk them through a real-life scenario • Provide an analogy – Compare it to something they already understand 2/ Focus on clarity Make every sentence count. You should: • Cut the fluff – Keep things direct and easy to digest • Avoid jargon – Don’t alienate your audience with technical terms 3/ Guide them step-by-step Lead them through the process by: • Creating a roadmap – Show them the clear path to the solution • Using simple steps – Break down your solution into bite-sized actions Simple, clear, and relatable content drives conversions. PS. Share it with a technical founder who struggles to communicate their product’s value.

  • View profile for Maya Moufarek
    Maya Moufarek Maya Moufarek is an Influencer

    Full-Stack Fractional CMO for Tech Startups | Exited Founder, Angel Investor & Board Member

    25,341 followers

    Your marketing playbook just expired. AI has rewritten every rule while most brands are still playing by 2019 strategies. The companies adapting fastest aren't the ones with bigger budgets or better tech teams. They're the ones who understand how AI has fundamentally changed customer behaviour. Here's what the winners are doing differently: 1. The New Search Landscape: SEO meets LLM Traditional keywords are the past. Conversational queries are everything. Example: REI shifted from keyword-stuffed descriptions to contextual content addressing specific use cases, increasing AI-summarised results visibility by 47%. Reality check: Google's AI Overviews now appear in nearly half of all search results. 2. AI Assistants as Gatekeepers Your brand must be recognised by AI as a category leader to enter consideration sets. Example: Best Buy organised product attributes to match natural customer questions, achieving 35% increase in organic traffic from voice searches. The shift: AI now filters options before consumers see them. 3. Attention Compression Consumer attention spans shrink as AI summarises everything instantly. Action point: Front-load your value proposition in all communications. The pattern: Customers want to digest information about products quickly, not hunt to understand what’s in it for them. 4. Hyper-Personalisation Without Creepiness AI enables true 1:1 marketing at scale, but only if you balance customisation with transparency. Example: Sephora's Skin IQ tool provides personalised skincare recommendations, driving 35% growth in skincare sales. The principle: Use preference-based content sequencing with full transparency about data usage. 5. Multi-Modal Content Strategy AI-driven consumers expect seamless experiences across text, voice, and visual channels. Example: Domino's "AnyWare" approach allows ordering through voice assistants, text, social media, and apps. The requirement: Build centralised content hubs ensuring consistent messaging across all channels. 6. The Human Advantage As AI handles transactions, authentic human connection becomes your competitive edge. Example: Lululemon's in-store community events resulted in 25% higher repeat purchase rates compared to online-only shoppers. The opportunity: Community-building programs generate 23% higher customer lifetime value. The brands that thrive won't be those with the most sophisticated AI tools. They'll be the ones that use AI to enhance human connection rather than replace it. Which of these shifts will you implement first? ♻️ Found this helpful? Repost to share with your network.  ⚡ Want more content like this? Hit follow Maya Moufarek.

  • View profile for Pratik Thakker

    CEO at INSIDEA | Times 40 Under 40 | HubSpot Elite Partner

    248,604 followers

    Most brands do not struggle with traffic. They struggle with friction. In many cases, performance looks strong on the surface. Traffic is growing, ad spend is optimized, and follow-ups are consistent. Yet conversions remain flat, and the reason is not immediately clear. The issue often becomes visible only when the journey is experienced from a buyer’s perspective. Multiple value propositions compete for attention. Pages are overloaded with options. Forms feel unnecessarily complex. Nothing is fundamentally broken, but everything feels heavy. The result is hesitation. The solution is rarely to add more. It is to remove. When messaging is simplified to a single, clear problem, choices are reduced, and the path to action is streamlined, the impact becomes immediate. Conversions improve not because of increased pressure, but because of increased clarity. This is where strong brands differentiate. They refine continuously. They reduce noise. They design experiences that make decisions easier. In a nonlinear B2B journey, simplicity is not just a branding principle. It is a growth lever. This week’s newsletter explores why friction, not creativity, often limits performance and how to systematically remove it across the buyer journey. For teams focused on improving conversion, positioning, or overall experience, this is a shift worth understanding.

  • View profile for Lucy Woolfenden

    Fractional CMO for scaling B2B tech | Turning messy growth into clear decisions | fractional growth teams

    12,568 followers

    One of the best conversion wins? Actually listening to your customers. It’s easy to get caught up in optimising buttons, headlines, and landing pages. But often, the real answers are already out there — if you know where to look. Last month, a founder I work with was stuck at a 2% conversion rate. Instead of diving straight into CRO tools, we did something simple: 𝐒𝐩𝐨𝐤𝐞 𝐭𝐨 15 𝐜𝐮𝐬𝐭𝐨𝐦𝐞𝐫𝐬 𝐰𝐡𝐨 𝐡𝐚𝐝 𝐫𝐞𝐜𝐞𝐧𝐭𝐥𝐲 𝐛𝐨𝐮𝐠𝐡𝐭. What we learned: 💡 Their biggest buying fear wasn’t addressed anywhere 💡 The pricing page created confusion rather than clarity 💡 The language on the site didn’t match how customers talked But we didn’t stop there. We also layered in 𝐬𝐨𝐜𝐢𝐚𝐥 𝐥𝐢𝐬𝐭𝐞𝐧𝐢𝐧𝐠 — pulling insights from reviews, competitor reviews, social posts, and forums — to add a broader view on top of the direct conversations. The result? Depth from interviews. Scale from social data. A full picture of what customers really needed. And after updating the messaging, 𝐜𝐨𝐧𝐯𝐞𝐫𝐬𝐢𝐨𝐧𝐬 𝐣𝐮𝐦𝐩𝐞𝐝 𝐟𝐫𝐨𝐦 2% 𝐭𝐨 7.8%. No ad spend. No new tools. Just better understanding. Real growth starts when you stop guessing and start listening — properly. When’s the last time you checked not just what your customers say to you… but what they’re saying when they think you’re not listening? #CustomerInsights #GrowthStrategy #ConversionRateOptimisation

  • View profile for Vahe Arabian

    Founder & Publisher, State of Digital Publishing | Founder & Growth Architect, SODP Media | Helping Publishing Businesses Scale Technology, Audience and Revenue

    10,246 followers

    If your site is slow, you’re leaving traffic and revenue on the table. Core Web Vitals are no longer optional. Google has made them a ranking factor, meaning publishers that ignore them risk losing visibility, traffic, and user trust. For those of us working in SEO and digital publishing, the message is clear: speed, stability, and responsiveness directly affect performance. Core Web Vitals focus on three measurable aspects of user experience: → Largest Contentful Paint (LCP): How quickly the main content loads. Target: under 2.5 seconds. → First Input Delay (FID) / Interaction to Next Paint (INP): How quickly the page responds when a user interacts. Target: under 200 milliseconds. → Cumulative Layout Shift (CLS): How visually stable a page is. Target: less than 0.1. These metrics are designed to capture the “real” experience of a visitor, not just what a developer or SEO sees on their end. Why publishers can't ignore CWV in 2025 1. SEO & Trust: Only ~47% of sites pass CWV assessments, presenting a competitive edge for publishers who optimize now. 2. Page performance pays off: A 1-second improvement can boost conversions by ~7% and reduce bounce rates—benefits seen across industries 3. User expectations have tightened: In 2025, anything slower than 3 seconds feels “slow” to most users—under 1 s is becoming the new gold standard, especially on mobile devices. 4. Real-world wins: a. Economic Times cut LCP by 80%, CLS by 250%, and slashed bounce rates by 43%. b. Agrofy improved LCP by 70%, and load abandonment fell from 3.8% to 0.9%. c. Yahoo! JAPAN saw session durations rise 13% and bounce rates drop after CLS fixes. Practical steps for improvement • Measure regularly: Use lab and field data to monitor Core Web Vitals across templates and devices. • Prioritize technical quick wins: Image compression, proper caching, and removing render-blocking scripts can deliver immediate improvements. • Stabilize layouts: Define media dimensions and manage ad slots to reduce layout shifts. • Invest in long-term fixes: Optimizing server response times and modernizing templates can help sustain improvements. Here are the key takeaways ✅ Core Web Vitals are measurable, actionable, and tied directly to SEO performance. ✅ Faster, more stable sites not only rank better but also improve engagement, ad revenue, and subscriptions. ✅ Publishers that treat Core Web Vitals as ongoing maintenance, not one-time fixes will see compounding benefits over time. Have you optimized your site for Core Web Vitals? Share your results and tips in the comments, your insights may help other publishers make meaningful improvements. #SEO #DigitalPublishing #CoreWebVitals #PageSpeed #UserExperience #SearchRanking

  • View profile for Andrey Gadashevich

    Operator of a $50M Shopify Portfolio | 48h to Lift Sales with Strategic Retention & Cross-sell | 3x Founder 🤘

    12,387 followers

    For years, true personalization in ecommerce felt out of reach, too complex, too reliant on massive data infrastructure But in 2025, it’s not just possible, it’s expected * Customer Data Platforms (CDPs) can now unify behavioral, transactional, and anonymous data to recognize visitors in real-time and dynamically segment audiences. * Generative AI builds on that foundation, automating hyper-personalized product recommendations, emails, and even entire storefronts tailored to browsing habits, purchase history, and preferences * Today’s ecommerce personalization means: individualized landing pages, AI chat that understands customer intent, and product suggestions that evolve with each click Brands are no longer optimizing for demographics, they’re creating a “segment of one” The results? Higher conversion rates, deeper customer retention, and a distinct competitive advantage But unlocking this requires more than tech; it demands a strategic approach to data, tools, and team readiness Are you leveraging personalization as a growth engine? 

  • View profile for Purvi Soni

    Product Marketing Manager @ ElasticRun | B2B SaaS | GTM | Full funnel

    2,895 followers

    Having worked in a role where my key OKR was increasing freemium-to-paid conversions through various in-app upgrade nudges, I’ve spent a lot of time understanding user behavior, specifically how ‘forced’ upgrades compare to subtle, outcome-driven ones. Spotify's recent update reinforced my key learning: how one unnecessary nudge can turn a happy customer into a frustrated churn. I decided to explore the freemium version of Spotify this weekend to study the feature parity between free and paid plans. Just when I thought the endless ads were the most 'frustrating' part, I got a pop-up while searching for a song - "Songs will now play in a random order. You can choose songs again tomorrow or buy Premium." I strongly believe conversions are a byproduct of strong product adoption. happy customers → higher adoption → stickiness → conversion > advocacy As a product marketer, I think the focus shouldn’t be on adding more restrictions and gated features in the free plan but on allowing users to experience enough value that upgrading feels like the 'natural' next step. If your free users can’t truly experience your product, they’ll start looking for alternatives before they even get the chance to see its real value. . . . #spotify #productmarketing #productmanagement #userexperience #saas

Explore categories