Haley Stracher shared her expertise on user onboarding, emphasizing the criticality of the initial user experience. Her practical, three-step method for effective onboarding—introduction, cognitive load management, and retention through rewards—highlights the significance of a user's first interaction with a product. She also tackled common onboarding mistakes, the importance of accessibility, and shared a success story to illustrate her points.

Effective Onboarding Steps:

Introduction:Emphasize the product's benefits.Utilize tutorials, carousels, and videos for user engagement.Cognitive Load:Limit tasks to three to avoid overwhelming users.Too many tasks without rewards can deter users.Retention:Reward users after completing tasks for serotonin boost and retention.Simple gestures of recognition can significantly impact user satisfaction.

Common Onboarding Mistakes:

Asking Too Many Questions:Unnecessary questions lead to false data and user drop-off.Explaining the purpose of data collection can enhance trust and compliance.Neglecting Analytics and User Feedback:Analytics reveal drop-off points indicating issues.User interviews provide insights to improve the onboarding process.

Creating Memorable First User Experiences:

Branding and Visuals:Align visuals with company's mission and identity.Brand identity impacts user's first impression significantly.Copywriting:Clear, error-free, and personable copy is as crucial as visuals.

Accessibility in Onboarding:

Standard Practice:Accessibility is no longer optional but a standard expectation.Contrast checkers, font sizes, and inclusivity in gender options are critical.Inclusive Design:Consider target audience characteristics, like age, in design decisions.

Success Story in Improved Onboarding:

Problem Identification:Diverse user personas require different onboarding paths.Understanding user context is key to providing value.Solution Implementation:A bifurcated onboarding approach tailored to user location (home/store).Algorithmic guesses of warranty expiry provided a "small win" for at-home users.

Notable Quotes from Haley Stracher:

"If you do too much and don't reward users, they're going to feel like it never ends.""Explain why at every juncture—it can be really helpful and useful.""Design is always an iterative process. It's never done.""Accessibility has become more of a standard than a nice to have.""Understanding your users a little bit better can solve onboarding problems by making a fork in the road."

About Tent Talks

Chicago Camps hosts irregularly scheduled Tent Talks with people from all across the User Experience Design community, and beyond. Who really likes limits, anyway--If it's a cool idea, we'd love to hear about it and share it!

What is a Tent Talk? That's a great question, we'd love to tell you.

Tent Talks are short-form in nature, generally lasting from 10-20 minutes (ish) in a recorded format--we like to think of them as "S'mores-sized content" because that's pretty on-brand. Tent Talks can be a presentation on a topic, a live Q&A session about the work we do, or the work around the work we do, or really just about anything--we don't want to limit ourselves, or you.

You should send along an idea or topic of your own so we can learn from you, as well! You don't have to be a published author or a professional speaker on a circuit to be good at your job, so please, put yourself forward, and let's have some fun, talk, and share your experience with others!