Is the quality of UI and the presence of animation important for the MVP?
Sergei Petrov
22 replies
Often we try to make quick functionality to test it. Have you ever faced the fact that the first customers were turned away by an ugly interface or poor quality design of the application?
Replies
Çağla Çağlar@uxcagla
CoolNotions
Certainly! Presentation is everything. Even the best features can be overlooked due to a weak interface. Making a solid first impression on initial users is critical, so paying attention to design and user interface quality is necessary. ✨
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I believe that good design should be clear, functional, consistent, and, sure, fast to build. For early stage - fancy UI can be important for B2C startups and less for B2B. Animation doesn't help to validate idea - so not for MVP.
@kate_rusalovich Yes, in general, I rarely see animation, even on large projects.
Personally, I try to maintain balance throughout the development process. And at the very beginning, I consciously try to spend less time on the interface in order to spend more resources on functionality. 🤔
@sergeipetrov Not often. But if you have too less time for a complete product, I think it's better to figure out what your MVP prefers, visual experience or technology. Communication and information will tell you how to save time.
@sergeipetrov Our UI designer makes the interface simple and clean, so you can explain it as minimalism. But the motion of interaction needs to be smooth, which can make it look "expensive".
In our case, we kept the UI clean and simplistic, for the start. Now, we are shifting our focus mainly on the functionality of the app to ensure that the core features are developed and tested thoroughly. Subsequently, we can think about the refinement and enhancement of the UI.
darklens
UI doesn't have to be world class but it has to be clean enough to help users get things done without context. I think a good UI is essential part of an MVP.
@geri_mate Fully agree! But at the same time, it is not easy to make a good-quality interface and it happens that founders spend too many resources on it. At the same time, you can make pure functionality and help the first users deal with the application on personal calls. Collecting the first feedback is very important as soon as possible.
MVP = make it as sexy as possible with the less code & time possible
it's a fine balance between usable and beautiful enough to generate envy to use it haha
@sergeipetrov well... if the design makes one reject the app you can give it a bit more polish haha
Quality UI and some animation can enhance user experience even in an MVP, but they shouldn't overshadow functionality.
@nfoster_85 Yes, I agree with you. The feeling that everything should be in balance. But finding it is the hardest part. 😏
aiforme.wiki
Oh, definitely! It's like trying to enjoy a delicious meal when it's served on a messy plate – presentation matters a lot. I've seen cases where amazing functionality got overshadowed by a not-so-appealing interface, and it ended up turning potential users away.
First impressions really do count! 😄
@akanksha_hunts Yeah!
Do you know ways to tell if product design is scaring customers away?
What would you say, for example, about our landing page? 😄
https://www.ping-mi.com/