UX Planet - Medium 09月30日 04:11
漏斗模型:理解用户转化过程的三个关键阶段
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本文深入剖析了用户转化漏斗的通用结构,将其分解为“跳出”(Bounce)、“下滑”(Slide)和“捕获”(Catch)三个核心阶段。文章强调,漏斗的形状虽各异,但底层逻辑一致。跳出阶段主要与营销目标质量相关,而非用户体验;下滑阶段则直接反映了用户体验设计的优劣,任何显著的下降都需警惕。而捕获阶段,即最终决策时刻,是产品独特性、用户心理和实际转化碰撞的焦点,也是最有价值的优化空间。通过理解这一模型,企业能更精准地定位问题,而非盲目追求通用数据指标,从而有效提升转化效率。

🎯 **跳出(Bounce)阶段:意图决定质量。** 漏斗顶端的“跳出”现象,即用户初次访问后立即离开,通常并非用户体验问题,而是营销策略未能吸引到目标用户。文章指出,品牌宣传设定的是期望,而精准的营销则能激发用户的实际行动意图。若跳出率高,应优先优化营销目标定位和信息传递,而非调整网站界面设计。

🎢 **下滑(Slide)阶段:流畅体验是关键。** 漏斗中段的“下滑”过程,用户应能顺畅地从一个步骤过渡到下一个。若用户在此阶段大量流失,则表明用户体验设计存在问题,可能导致用户犹豫、困惑或放弃。理想情况下,每个步骤的下降幅度不应超过5%,任何较大的跌幅都意味着用户体验债务(UX debt)的存在,需要深入排查并优化。

🎣 **捕获(Catch)阶段:决策时刻的价值所在。** 漏斗的末端“捕获”阶段是实现最终转化的关键时刻,也是最有潜力通过优化来显著提升转化率的环节。这一阶段的成功与否,是产品独特性、用户心理和行为科学的综合体现。例如,通过简化最终决策流程(如直接提供一个课程而非让用户从海量选项中挑选)或利用微文案(microcopy)强化用户承诺,可以有效提升转化效果,这比仅仅关注通用数据基准更有实际意义。

The anatomy of a good funnel

Most funnels have the same shape.

Trust me on this — at use-glue.com we’ve helped 32 startups wrestle with conversion and onboarding. I’ve seen the data, stared at the drop-offs, run the experiments. Funnels look different on the surface, but under the hood, they almost always resolve into the same anatomy.

Here’s our take:

Every funnel breaks down into The Bounce, The Slide, and The Catch.

Once you understand this shape, you can spot where things are normal, where they’re broken, and where you should (and shouldn’t) spend your time trying to optimise.

The Bounce

This is the top of the funnel, where people land and instantly leave. That’s usually not a UX problem — it’s a lead quality problem.

But here’s the nuance: intent.

A good example is these two message positions for GetThursday.com dating app’s website:

Message A:

Message B:

A brand promise like Message A pulls in lots of traffic but little intent.

A sharper call like Message B drives users into a specific action.

That’s why bounce is often more about your marketing than your UX. Brand sets expectations, performance marketing sets intent. (If you’re curious about that rabbit hole, this explainer is a good place to start.)

If your bounce is ugly, stop fiddling with button colors. Fix your targeting and sharpen the intent.

The Slide

The slide is the smooth middle. People should glide from step to step with minimal drama. If they’re dropping here, that’s on you as a UX designer.

Something in the UX is making them pause, second-guess, or bail.

You should not be seeing more than a 5% dip on any one of these steps, this should signal to you that something is wrong.

How do you flatten the slide? This is a question massively covered out there and the goal of this article is to help you know what to fix not how to fix it that’s someone elses battle, but this is a good place to start.

Flat slide = healthy funnel. Any dip here is UX debt.

The Catch

This is where things get interesting. The last step. The decision moment.

Here’s why most of your effort should live here: it’s where you can actually move the needle. The bounce is usually marketing. The slide should just be flat. But the catch? This is where the uniqueness of your product, audience, and psychology collide.

Example from the Glue archives:

In 2019 we worked on a startup called Stairway Learning (Duolingo for GCSE).

We iterated this final step four times. Analytics, interviews, experiments led us to understanding that the 40% conversion on the final step was a decision-fatigue problem.

Instead of asking the user to pick their first lesson from 100+ different lessons, we dropped them straight into one.

This is a similar strategy to how yelp drove users to simply make a first review, this is from NN/G:

Let’s look at the workflow of writing a review for Yelp.com. Because people can start writing a review without an account, this process seems both low-stakes (no personal data is shared with the organization) and easy (no work is required to create an account before reviewing, and the interaction to rate a business and to review requires only one click). But as soon as the user begins typing the review, the form field presents motivational microcopy: Keep those fingers rolling, you wizard of words. What seems like inconsequential text is actually an expert use of behavioral consistency: it reminds the user to stick to the commitment of writing a review and encourages her to make the additional commitment of writing even more.

This small tweak we made to the stairway funnel bumped conversion by ~24%.

After 4 sprints worth of work on the funnel you can imagine we were pulling out our hair but we believed that this should be higher and after relentless experimentation we found it.

As Sean Ellis put it in Hacking Growth: “Growth doesn’t come from copying someone else’s benchmark — it comes from relentlessly experimenting at the sharp end of your funnel.”

So, benchmarks? Still dumb.

I wrote a post a few days ago where I asserted that Conversion Benchmarks are dumb.

I stand by that.

Funnels are too weird, too bespoke, too tree-like to be benchmarked in any useful way. You can move the start of the funnel at any point and frame the conversion whatever you want.

Instead of masaging the data, know the anatomy:

Then stop chasing someone else’s magic percentage. Get to work on your own.

References


The Anatomy of a Good Funnel was originally published in UX Planet on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.

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用户转化 漏斗模型 用户体验 转化率优化 营销策略 Funnel Conversion User Experience CRO Marketing Strategy
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