4 Common Myths of Website User Experience

Mikel BruceAdvisor Perspectives welcomes guest contributions. The views presented here do not necessarily represent those of Advisor Perspectives.

Chances are, you’ve invested considerable time and resources into building, or perhaps refreshing, your website. And while you’ve worked hard to add new pages, update headshots, and make sure everything is compliance-friendly, there may be one thing missing.

If your site doesn’t offer a seamless and compelling user experience (or UX, as it’s often called), it very well could be underperforming — ultimately costing you future clients.

Despite sounding like a web developer buzzword, UX can be viewed as the invisible thread that either draws visitors in, or — in some scenarios — quietly drives them away. For financial advisors, whose business depends on trust and first impressions, the impact of UX couldn’t be more critical.

To help exemplify the importance of UX, I’m breaking down a few of the most common UX myths, along with the top recommendations to avoid the pitfalls associated with them.

Myth 1: UX always means following best practices

If you follow UX best practices for websites, it will automatically translate to a positive user experience. Right? Well, not quite.

Yes, best practices do provide valuable guidelines (especially for those who may be new to website building), but they aren’t a one-size-fits-all solution. Rather, your website needs to address the specific behaviors, pain points, and expectations of your target clients.

Rather than blindly following best practices, use them as a foundation and customize them to fit your audience. You may find it helpful to implement A/B testing on your website to try different wording, graphics, layouts, and other elements to see what resonates best with them.

You should also consider questions like: What are your ideal clients looking for when they visit your site? What do they value in an advisor? Build your UX strategy around the answers.