Design isn’t decoration.
It’s direction.
Every color, every space, every typeface… is telling the user what to do without them even noticing.
And if you don’t control that, chaos will.
1. Visual hierarchy doesn’t guide… it manipulates
Users don’t read your website. They scan it.
Hierarchy decides:
- what they see first
- what they ignore
- and what they end up doing
Uncomfortable truth:
If everything stands out, nothing matters.
Do this:
- One focal point per screen
- Strong contrast on CTAs
- White space as a weapon, not filler
👉 You’re not organizing design. You’re designing decisions.
2. Color isn’t aesthetic. It’s applied psychology
Color doesn’t “look nice.” It feels.
And what people feel… converts.
- Blue → trust (but boring if overused)
- Red → action (or anxiety if abused)
- Green → calm (or irrelevance without contrast)
👉 The problem isn’t which color you choose.
It’s whether you use it with intention or just copy Pinterest.
3. Typography is voice, not text
Your website speaks.
Typography is the tone.
You can say the same thing with:
- authority
- warmth
- luxury
- or mediocrity
Common mistakes:
- “pretty” but unreadable fonts
- ridiculous sizes
- no hierarchy at all
👉 If it’s hard to read… it won’t sell. Simple as that.
4. Interaction isn’t “cool.” It’s invisible direction
Buttons, micro-interactions, icons…
they’re not there to “look modern.”
They exist to:
- confirm actions
- reduce friction
- guide without thinking
Real example:
A button that changes on hover
→ tells the user “this is clickable” without saying it
👉 UX isn’t about explaining. It’s about removing the need to think.
Conclusion
Great UX design goes unnoticed.
But it’s felt.
Because when it’s done right:
- users don’t hesitate
- they don’t get lost
- they don’t think
- they just move forward
And in business, that means one thing:
👉 more conversions without saying a single extra word