The e-commerce boom sees no sign of slowing, with recent figures showing that online UK sales have seen double-digit growth in the past five years alone.
This stratospheric rise has been driven by a number of factors; not least the speed and convenience that online shopping offers busy consumers in today’s on-demand society. What’s more, the ease at which entrepreneurs can now set up online retail businesses, unconstrained by the obstacles of traditional bricks-and-mortar operations, means that the number of e-commerce sites has soared in the past few years.
With so many brands moving into the pure play online space, following on the success of industry giants such as Amazon and Boohoo, the market is becoming increasingly dog-eat-dog. Retailers face a constant battle to keep pace with their peers – many of whom may be offering extremely similar products at a comparable price point – and this is where website user experience (UX) design is a game changer.
Great UX design allows consumers to navigate with ease through a website, providing a shopping experience that is both pleasing for the end user and profitable for the retailer, too. If retailers can make the shopper’s online journey as simple, seamless and enjoyable as possible, it removes a number of key barriers to purchase – for example, unnecessary account sign-ups or a confusing user journey. This means that consumers are more likely to spend. In this regard, UX can be extremely lucrative.
However, as the e-retail landscape becomes ever more competitive, we have begun to see major retailers subverting best practice and using some of the principles of UX design in a duplicitous way to trick customers into spending more money on their sites. These ‘dark UX’ methods, in which website interfaces are deliberately designed to tap into a range of established behavioural psychology traits – such as the ‘fear of missing out’ – are becoming extremely commonplace in modern e-retailing.
Dark UX patterns are premeditated; well thought-out and based on behavioural psychology.
We completed an evaluation of the strategies that some brands use on their websites to boost sales in December 2016, and revisited the subject again recently. Worryingly, we saw no major improvements in the cross-section of retailers we investigated.
Dark UX: the methods
Upselling and auto-renewal
Buy it now or regret it later
Shoppers hate to feel they’ve missed out. Both fashion retailers Boohoo and Pretty Little Thing capitalise on this by urging customers to complete their purchases before a ‘limited’ delivery offer is no longer available. However, it is unclear whether the offer is genuinely limited, or simply a countdown to a regular, daily occurrence. Shoppers may once again be panicked into buying an item at that moment, instead of taking time to reflect on whether it is what they really want or need.
False incentivisation
Research also showed that major electrical retailer AO.com offers discounts on sale items for shoppers to apply during the checkout process – but that these were later difficult to both find and redeem. While incentivising purchase is not misconduct in itself, AO.com appears to have offered an extra promotion at this crucial stage in the process to tempt shoppers into buying items already on sale, but has not clearly signposted such codes in the checkout process.
Checkout manipulation
River Island was also found to be prioritising data collection over user experience, not allowing shoppers to checkout without going through a lengthy process of creating an account, where data such as their email address is collected.
Transparency is key
While we understand that the retail landscape is extremely competitive at the moment – particularly in an age where e-commerce sites can quite literally ‘pop up’ out of nowhere – it’s concerning that big-name brands are using some less than transparent strategies to try and squeeze more money or data out of consumers.
We had hoped to see an improvement on the use of dark UX patterns since completing a similar study just over a year ago. However, it seems that these arguably unethical practices are still very much in place. The examples listed here are just a brief cross-section of what we know is happening across the commercial sector – not just in retail, but in the leisure, travel and other business sectors, too.
User experience strategies are supposed to provide a simple, positive and encouraging means for consumers to interact online with a product or service, but in a climate where consumers are more discerning than ever, brands have a business imperative as well as a moral obligation to behave ethically and transparently. UK retailers would do well to remind themselves of this in future.
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