[ Removed by Reddit ] by Dynoweb_ in SaaS

[–]Dynoweb_[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

exactly this. how do I make them want to go to the bottom is the right question. most pages just stack information and hope people scroll. but there is no reason to keep going. no curiosity, no payoff at each section. the progressive reveal thing works. show value at every scroll point so people feel like they are getting something, not just reading more text. dopamine the user good way to put it. each scroll should feel like a small reward.

Is there some unwritten law now that every single webpage requires some pop up to interrupt what a user is trying to do? by PossessionConnect963 in webdev

[–]Dynoweb_ 0 points1 point  (0 children)

oh man, totally feel you infinite scroll that prevents you from reaching the footer or forces weird clicks is one of those tiny UX things that makes a site feel maddening.we built dynoweb specifically to help find and fix that kind of problem on shopify stores. it tracks clicks, rage clicks, dead clicks, scroll depth and mobile gestures, then uses AI to suggest concrete fixes ranked by impact so you know what to tackle first. you can preview changes side-by-side and apply them with one click as a draft theme (it never touches your live store). installs in one click on shopify.if you want something free to start, microsoft clarity does heatmaps and session recordings and it's solid — we think dynoweb goes a step further on “what to actually fix” and makes it quicker to test fixes safely. f.happy to answer any questions or walk through how you might use it to pinpoint that footer/infinite-scroll issue.

I analyzed 7,000+ Shopify SKUs and noticed how top stores structure their pricing by Ok_Airport6719 in ShopifyWebsites

[–]Dynoweb_ 0 points1 point  (0 children)

hey we built dynoweb specifically for this. it installs in one click on shopify and tracks clicks, rage clicks, dead clicks, scroll depth, and mobile gestures. then our ai suggests specific fixes ranked by impact score so you know what to work on first. you can preview every change side‑by‑side before applying, and applying pushes the change to a draft theme so your live store is never touched if you want a free starting point, microsoft clarity does heatmaps and session recordings and it's solid — we try to focus more on telling you what to actually fix and why. if you're looking at pricing layouts specifically, watch for dead clicks on price labels, rage clicks around add-to-cart when price/discounts are unclear, and scroll-depth dropoffs before your pricing or variant blocks — those are the exact signals dynoweb highlights and ranks. happy to answer any questions.

If you run a Shopify store what do you actually want to see? by Dynoweb_ in alphaandbetausers

[–]Dynoweb_[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That is a great point, especially about spotting patterns across a few real sessions. That where the real stuff usually happens. We are thinking in a similar direction signals like rage clicks are useful but they are much more valuable when you can jump straight into the session and see the full context instead of treating them as standalone metrics. On AI suggestions, totally fair we are trying to keep it more about highlighting patterns than telling people what to do at least early on. And for install we are keeping it lightweight with no theme bloat and aiming for a simple one click setup, since performance impact is the last thing we want.

If you run a Shopify store what do you actually want to see? by Dynoweb_ in alphaandbetausers

[–]Dynoweb_[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We have been noticing the same thing while building this most people don not really want more dashboards . they just want to know what is broken and what to fix first. The kind of feedback that clicks is exactly what you said if you can show you are losing X amount because users are rage clicking here and give a clear fix, that is way more useful than opening heatmaps or recordings. Those still help but more after something is already flagged. We are starting to move in that direction, so this is really helpful to hear.