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This Common Mistake Could Be Driving Users Away From Your Website. Here's How to Fix It.

This Common Mistake Could Be Driving Users Away From Your Website. Here's How to Fix It.

By Goran PaunEntrepreneur

This Common Mistake Could Be Driving Users Away From Your Website. Here’s How to Fix It. A journey only works when the interface guides it, because without clear patterns, users loop through pages without knowing where they’re meant to go next. Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own. Key Takeaways Treating UI and UX as different priorities creates a confusing experience. Users don’t separate how a website looks from how it behaves. They only notice if the site feels easy and natural to use. A logical flow won’t help anyone if interface patterns are unclear. And a strong visual system won’t rescue a navigation path that sends people in circles. A unified approach removes those gaps and creates an experience that feels human and intentional, keeping the user oriented as they move through it. In digital projects, user interface (UI) and user experience (UX) often get discussed as if they exist in separate worlds. In reality, the person using the website experiences one continuous interaction. They aren’t thinking about industry acronyms or labels. They aren’t separating what they see from how it behaves. They’re only noticing whether the journey makes sense and whether each step feels natural. I see this pattern across redesigns of all sizes, from enterprise platforms to smaller marketing sites. Stakeholders often assume UI and UX can be divided into one handling aesthetics and the other handling logic. That separation may feel intuitive internally, but it doesn’t reflect how real people interact with a website. The moment UI and UX are treated as different priorities, the product begins drifting away from user needs. The interface can look nice, but movement through it lacks clarity. Or the structure is solid, and the copy is coherent, yet the visuals don’t support it. Either way, the experience becomes fragmented, and users notice it immediately. Related: Data Isn’t Always Enough for UI/UX Design. Here’s Why Intuition Matters, Too. Where design aligns with behavior Most teams think of UX as structure and UI as visuals, but watching a real user interact with a product reveals how tightly the two depend on each other. I tend to think of UI/UX as a full system , and that includes the technology behind the design. A logical flow won’t help anyone if interface patterns are unclear. And when data loads slowly or displays inconsistently, it disrupts the experience long before any visual decision even matters. The opposite is true as well. A strong visual system won’t rescue a navigation path that sends people in circles. Unstructured layouts make content difficult to parse. When spacing, hierarchy and grouping aren’t intentional, the user ends up reading the page the wrong way. They skim past key actions or misinterpret what’s important. This creates unparsable data : The information is technically present, but the way it’s arranged makes it difficult to process or prioritize. We encountered this recently on a redesign where analytics showed something interesting. Users were finding the right pages. Traffic was strong. But people weren’t...

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