You don’t usually lose conversions because your product is bad. More often, it’s friction. Small, quiet moments where the user hesitates, gets confused, or simply gives up.
Good UX doesn’t shout. Bad UX quietly bleeds revenue.
Here are ten common mistakes that hurt conversions more than most teams realize.
1. Slow load times
People don’t wait. Even a couple of extra seconds can tank your conversion rate.
Speed is not a “nice to have” anymore. It’s part of your first impression. If your page feels sluggish, users assume everything else will be too.
What to do:
- Compress images and assets
- Avoid heavy scripts you don’t need
- Test on real devices, not just your laptop
2. Too many choices
When users face too many options, they don’t choose better. They choose nothing.
This shows up in pricing pages, navigation menus, and feature comparisons. You think you’re helping. You’re actually overwhelming.
What to do:
- Limit primary actions to one or two
- Highlight a recommended option
- Remove anything that doesn’t support the main goal
3. Weak or unclear call-to-action
If your button says “Submit” or “Continue,” you’re missing an opportunity.
Users need clarity and motivation. What happens next? Why should they click?
What to do:
- Use specific language: “Start free trial” beats “Get started”
- Make the CTA visually distinct
- Place it where users naturally look
4. Asking for too much too soon
Long forms kill momentum.
If you ask for email, phone number, company size, budget, and favorite color before showing value, users will leave.
What to do:
- Start with the minimum information
- Break forms into steps if needed
- Delay non-essential questions
5. Poor mobile experience
Mobile traffic is often the majority. Yet many products still treat it as secondary.
Tiny buttons, broken layouts, and slow interactions make users bounce fast.
What to do:
- Design mobile-first, not as an afterthought
- Make tap targets large enough
- Test flows on actual phones
6. Lack of trust signals
Users are cautious. If your site feels even slightly sketchy, they won’t convert.
No reviews, no real names, no clear company info, no security indicators. All of that adds doubt.
What to do:
- Show testimonials and real customer stories
- Add recognizable logos if you have them
- Make pricing and policies transparent
7. Confusing navigation
If users can’t figure out where to go, they won’t explore.
Navigation should feel obvious. When it doesn’t, people don’t try harder. They leave.
What to do:
- Use simple, familiar labels
- Keep menus short and focused
- Make key paths easy to find from anywhere
8. Hidden pricing or surprises
Nothing kills trust faster than unexpected costs.
If users have to dig to understand pricing, or worse, get surprised at checkout, conversions drop.
What to do:
- Be upfront about pricing
- Clearly explain what’s included
- Avoid hidden fees
9. No clear value proposition
If a user can’t quickly understand what you do and why it matters, they won’t stick around.
This often happens on landing pages filled with vague buzzwords.
What to do:
- Answer “What is this?” and “Why should I care?” immediately
- Use plain language
- Focus on outcomes, not features
- Ignoring user feedback
You are not your user.
Assumptions feel right internally, but real users behave differently. If you’re not listening, you’re guessing.
What to do:
- Watch session recordings
- Run simple usability tests
- Talk to actual customers regularly
Final thought
Most conversion problems are not big, dramatic failures. They are small points of friction that add up.
Fixing UX is not about redesigning everything. It’s about removing obstacles.
Make things clearer. Faster. Easier.
Conversions usually follow.
We built a free conversion rate optimization tool that scans your website and spots out clear issues how to optimize your website.
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