When we started building Forequestrian.com, our goal was simple: create a modern e-commerce experience for riders and horse lovers — without the clutter that often comes with online stores.
Over the last few months, I’ve learned a lot about designing for focus, trust, and simplicity. Here are a few lessons worth sharing for anyone working on UX for niche e-commerce.
Visual calm builds trust
Horse enthusiasts often shop for premium, practical gear. We wanted the design to reflect that — clean, neutral tones, and soft typography.
The key takeaway: don’t let the interface compete with the product. A calm layout keeps the focus where it belongs — on the items themselves.
Product hierarchy matters more than we think
During early testing, we noticed users scrolling past categories because our visuals were too similar. We restructured the hierarchy — stronger contrasts between product cards, clearer CTA placement, and consistent image ratios.
Result: visitors found what they wanted faster, and bounce rates dropped significantly.
Keep navigation familiar
We avoided experimental layouts. Instead, we focused on a predictable, mobile-first structure. Riders often browse on their phones while on the go, so our menu needed to feel instantly familiar.
Sometimes the most innovative thing you can do in UX is not to reinvent navigation.
Performance = UX
A slow site kills trust. We used lazy loading, modern image formats, and minimal JavaScript to make sure pages load quickly — even on rural connections (yes, a lot of our users literally live on farms!).
Speed directly affects conversion and satisfaction — so treat it as part of the design, not an afterthought.
Design for passion, not just purchase
Building Forequestrian.com reminded me that UX isn’t only about usability — it’s about emotion. For many of our users, horses aren’t a hobby; they’re a lifestyle.
Design with that passion in mind, and everything else starts to make sense.
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