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Why UI Design Trends Can Make or Break a Product

NotaPublicado: Mar Jul 01, 2025 0:12 am
por figaloprepod
A few months ago, we audited an early-stage edtech platform that couldn’t figure out why users were bouncing so quickly. The product worked, the content was solid—but people just didn’t stick around.

Their UI followed every recent trend: glassmorphism overlays, soft pastel gradients, floating buttons, and complex swipe gestures. It looked like a Behance dream. But for real users—especially teachers with limited tech experience—it was a nightmare.

The lesson? UI design trends can’t replace usability. They should enhance clarity, not complicate it. We ended up redesigning the interface using a clean, high-contrast layout, intuitive navigation, and a few subtle animations for feedback. Nothing fancy—just user-first.

After the relaunch, engagement jumped 60%, and support tickets dropped in half.

Trends change fast. Good design doesn’t.

Re: Why UI Design Trends Can Make or Break a Product

NotaPublicado: Mar Jul 01, 2025 2:27 am
por borovfriss
Spot on—chasing visual trends without thinking about the actual users is a fast way to lose them. I’ve seen it happen too often. One thing we always stress is cross-browser compatibility. You can have the cleanest layout, but if it breaks on Safari or loads weird on older Androids, it’s game over. Keeping up with ui design trends is fine—but they’ve got to work everywhere, for everyone.