At Innovate, we balance aesthetic design with user experience (UX) by ensuring that our designs are visually appealing but also functional and user-friendly. We start by understanding our client's brand identity and goals, then create designs that reflect their aesthetic while prioritizing intuitive navigation and accessibility. For example, during a website redesign for a local boutique, we crafted a visually stunning design that showcased their unique brand style. Simultaneously, we focused on UX by simplifying the navigation, optimizing load times, and ensuring mobile responsiveness. The result was a beautiful, user-friendly website that increased user engagement and sales by 30%, demonstrating the successful integration of aesthetic design and user experience.
Our sites offer benefit administration solutions for companies of all sizes and an enrollment platform used by employees of various backgrounds, where rules regarding benefit enrollment can vary from state to state. Due to this scope, and the requirements of building and designing software in a heavily regulated industry, many of our projects require us to display; explanation of benefit tables, resource folders for documents related to each benefit offered, lengthy statements, and selectors that can increase in length based on a user’s beneficiaries and dependents. These features and more can lead to a site filled with everything a user needs on their user experience journey, but lacking in aesthetics due to how much content must go on one page; the way we solve this is with out-of-the-box solutions and extensive iterating throughout the design process. During the most recent redesign of our benefit enrollment platform, we noticed that some benefits provided lengthy, but essential forms that were blending in with our provided descriptions and instructions; this lack of delineation caused users to skip through sections of the page, and as a result, would create confusion regarding which actionable steps the user had to take. The ideal and most aesthetically pleasing solution would have been to separate the content into more pages and guide the user through smaller steps, allowing them to absorb all the necessary information. But since we were required to have the whole text displayed on one page, we instead created that separation using containers with their own design rules to uniquely identify the content, while placing that content in consistent and expected areas, allowing users to find relevant information quickly in an otherwise text-heavy page. This allowed us to elevate the aesthetic of each element and let us focus on how to lay out the individual containers on the page, which improved the user experience significantly. There is always a struggle when it comes to incorporating aesthetically pleasing solutions to niche user experience problems, especially in industries with higher regulations and essential data representation, however, we find that involving aesthetics from the beginning of the user experience design process helps us balance both, creating an overall richer experience for our users.
As a CEO of Startup House, I always remind my team that while aesthetic design is important, user experience should always come first. One way to balance the two is by conducting user testing throughout the design process to ensure that the design not only looks good but also functions well for the end user. An example of a successful outcome of this approach is when we redesigned a client's website with a clean and modern aesthetic, while also improving the user experience by simplifying the navigation and making key information more accessible. This resulted in a significant increase in user engagement and conversion rates, proving that a balance between design and user experience is key to a successful project.
With any project we work on, we always aim to balance aesthetic design and user experience in a way that favors user experience. Great design should enhance the user experience rather than hinder it. Recently, I worked on integrating a new app for a client on an e-commerce site. Their site was visually stunning but suffered from slow load times (high FCP and CLS). I knew this was hurting sales because higher bounce rates are directly correlated with longer load times. Although improving load times wasn’t the initial goal of the project, we brought this issue to the client’s attention and got approval to make some changes. By optimizing the site’s performance, we significantly improved load times. As a result, not only did the user experience improve, but the client also saw a decrease in bounce rates. This project shows that by putting user experience first, we can achieve great results while still maintaining strong design principles. A great user experience doesn't have to be an ugly one and a beautiful user experience doesn't have to be slow.