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« Business Landscape of Design Podcast | Main | Mobile Blogging »
Sunday
12Jul2009

Design Impact on Purchase Decisions

Most people involved in user experience design spend the majority of their effort on honing their skills and applying them in creating a great look and feel for the offerings on which they work. However, it is often necessary to clearly communicate the business value of that design work. The most important business metric is often the impact of the design on purchase decisions. Similar to the surveys I've conducted in the past on this, I recently decided to poll the followers I have on my @ibmdesign Twitter account. I asked them the question, "what percentage of your product purchase decisions are typically based on the look and feel of the user interface?" and received the responses visualized in this pie chart. A total of 88% of respondents reported that look and feel was the basis of the purchase decision more than half of the time and 32% reported that it was the basis of their decision 76-100% of the time. These results corroborate and further extend previous findings which indicated that half of purchase decisions are based solely on the look and feel of the user interface.

As usual, please feel free to provide any thoughts you may have on this using the comment mechanism provided.

Reader Comments (2)

I think this holds true across more than just UI designs - look at products on the shelves in stores, the pleasent looking ones, with a good colour palette catch the eye more than the bland generic ones, and are more likely to be purchased by a consumer.

The problems comes in after the purchase if that same UI looks great but the functionality behind it sucks. I guess that is all the more reason to work closely with developers to ensure the product delivers a good UX and a good UI.

R

July 12, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterRory Craig-Barnes

Thanks for the comment, Rory. You make a very important point explicit. You have to have an overall great user experience and not just a great user interface to have a successful product. I often think of this as something that is in the "needless to say" category but you're right that it needs to be said.

August 4, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterKarel

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