
UX is the cheapest lever you’re not pulling.
Most businesses pour money into traffic — ads, SEO, social — and barely think about what happens after a visitor arrives. The result: a leaky bucket. You can spend twice as much on ads, or you can fix the bucket. Fixing the bucket is almost always cheaper.
Here are five UX improvements we’ve shipped across coaching brands, e-commerce stores, and SaaS sites that consistently move conversion rate.
Most homepages start with “Welcome to [Company]” or “We are a leading provider of…”. Visitors don’t care. They care about their problem. Open your homepage with a clear, sharp statement of the problem you solve and who you solve it for. The “about us” stuff goes on the About page.
A page with five competing buttons converts worse than a page with one. Decide what you want the visitor to do on this page — book a call, buy, sign up — and make that button the most visually prominent thing. Everything else is secondary.
Every field you add to a form cuts completions. A study by HubSpot found that reducing a form from 11 fields to 4 increased conversion by 120%. Ask yourself for every field: do we need this information now, or can we ask in a follow-up email? Most “phone number” fields can go.
Testimonials and logos work — but only when they’re placed where doubt happens. Put a testimonial right next to the pricing block. Put a logo strip directly under the hero. Put a “trusted by” line under the form CTA. Trust signals have to interrupt doubt at the moment it surfaces.
“Streamlined synergy across vertical ecosystems” doesn’t sell anything. The most effective web copy reads like the way your best customer talks to a friend over coffee. Sit on a sales call, write down the actual phrases prospects use, and put those phrases on the page.
A 1% lift in conversion rate, repeated across a year of traffic, can outpace the result of months of additional SEO work. UX improvements are the quietest, fastest ROI you can deliver to a website. Audit yours this week.


