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Linguaholic

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Posted

So I’ve been dealing with a weird situation in my SaaS project lately and wanted to hear some opinions. We run a small subscription-based tool for content scheduling, and everything was stable until we changed the signup flow. I thought making the onboarding more “guided” would help new users understand features faster, so we added extra steps, tooltips, and a short setup wizard. Instead, signups dropped and a lot of people never reached the dashboard. I even checked recordings and noticed some users just quit halfway through without interacting much. It’s confusing because on paper the flow looks more helpful than before. Has anyone here actually managed to improve conversions without making onboarding more complex? I feel like I might be overengineering things and missing the real issue.

 

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Posted

Yeah, I’ve been in almost the exact same situation when we were working on a SaaS analytics platform. We also thought adding more onboarding guidance would help users “get value faster,” but instead it created friction and people dropped off before reaching the core feature. What worked better for us was stripping things down and focusing on one clear action right after signup instead of trying to explain everything at once. We also had to rethink how we measured success because signups alone didn’t tell the full story. During that process we looked into different optimization approaches and found some useful structure in cro agency in London which helped us understand where to actually prioritize changes instead of guessing. After simplifying the onboarding and pushing users directly into the main feature, activation improved noticeably, even though the UI felt less “helpful” at first glance.

 

Posted

I just read through this thread while scrolling and it reminded me of a project I worked on a while ago, though it wasn’t SaaS-related. It was more of a membership-based platform for organizing community events, and we also struggled with keeping people engaged after signup. What stood out to me back then was how different users behaved compared to what we expected from our planning sessions. Some people just wanted immediate access without any explanation, while others explored everything slowly over time. We spent a lot of effort debating interface changes, but in the end the biggest improvement came from better understanding user intent before they even signed up. It’s interesting how these patterns repeat across different products, even when the industries are completely different, and it makes you realize how unpredictable real user behavior can be.

 

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