User experience (UX) design has been increasingly thrust into the spotlight over the last five years. Marketers across both B2B and B2C are seeing a sharp uptake in interest around UX after businesses started to realise its importance – and crucially, how it can impact the bottom line.
Thanks to this, UX designers are not only in demand (lucky me!), but also in prime position to lead the discussion on how UX can be best utilised, including how approaches differ between B2B and B2C.
Put simply, UX design is the strategy created to understand users’ interactions with services, technologies, and products.
It’s how we comprehend what people value, how they think when they decide to buy a product or a service, and how they act when purchasing something. Ultimately, it’s about putting people front and centre of your design strategy to achieve a better conversion rate.
Businesses that do this successfully are willing to invest time and energy into reaching their customers, understanding their needs, and putting them at the centre of their design by consistently reshaping features and capabilities.
Great UX design means you don’t overlook, underestimate, or overestimate any of the important interactions your customers need, helping you to stand out among competitors. It also benefits other businesses areas, such as customer services, sales, marketing, and product, thanks to a continuous and optimised understanding of customers.
We start by observing both conscious and unconscious behaviours to help us develop the right product framework. We conduct interviews and rigorous testing where necessary to generate insights to support our initial views. Then, we use this research to tailor a specific strategy to help us build and define personas, sitemaps, user flows, navigation systems, and wireframes.
Next, we build custom solutions based on real responses that will generate prototypes and interfaces. Creating a website based on customers insights saves development costs, cements customer loyalty, increases conversion rate, and generates a higher return on investment.
Most B2Cs now understand that good UX equals happy users – and in turn, bigger profit margins. But many B2Bers haven’t quite caught on yet.
Unsurprisingly, B2B is a different kettle of fish. The decision-making process is not as straightforward as B2C thanks to more complex browsing patterns.
This means that UX priorities are different. For example, streamlining the navigation journey so that customers can quickly find what they’re looking for is more important than improving browse functionalities.
Delivering a positive experience and improving product integration across channels will create an efficient and effortless customer journey. By targeting user interactions with the right content, UX can play a key role in developing the best practice experiences for B2B, helping businesses retain valuable customers.
Finally, it’s important to know that strategy is changing fast in the B2B landscape.
Sales funnels are being replaced by data-driven systems and user journeys. So, there’s no better way to understand what moves your customer than to ask them directly through the right combination of user research techniques, problem definition statements, ideation, and development.
UX design has become essential to how companies communicate their message. Any UX designer worth their salt will tell you that the end goal is enabling these businesses to make confident business decisions – something we at Octopus Group value highly!
The latest (and most useful) B2B insight, delivered to your inbox.
Publicis Pro needs the contact information you provide to send you the latest B2B insights. You may unsubscribe from these communications at anytime.