0:36 everyone this is WP product talk uh the place for every week we interview an experienced WordPress product owner on 0:43 strategies tips experiences failures and successes of running successful and 0:48 thriving WordPress product businesses I am Matt Cromwell co-founder of givewp and senior director of customer 0:54 experience at Stellar WP and I am Zach Katz founder of gravity kit and Trust a 1:00 login and today's uh topic is product ux and the Allure and problems with 1:06 deceptive patterns yeah and this is a great topic because I don't think it's talked enough 1:13 about in WordPress even though we talk about it uh sometimes in relationship to a couple plug-in businesses um but we 1:21 deal with deceptive patterns all day and they're so tempting to implement but uh there's a conversation to be had there 1:27 and we're going to have that today yeah absolutely and to talk about this one we brought on a special guest pich ner 1:36 thanks for being here cutter mid drink perfect that was great timing well at least I'm hydrated we know as much now 1:44 thank you so much for having me it's a real pleasure to be here thank you thank you absolutely can you tell the world 1:50 just a little bit about who you are and what you do and and why you're here why did we bring you on so I am a ux and UI 1:59 designer I do both and that's that's another conversation maybe for another day H and I am committed to creating the 2:10 best possible experiences online for users as well as businesses because it's really important to understand that that 2:17 really the ux involves the business as well so businesses need to do well so 2:23 that they can help the customers better that's kind of what I'm focused on and that's why I'm so interested in uh 2:30 accessibility for instance and things like deceptive patterns that are pretty very much also to do with uh 2:38 accessibility and I uh design uh I talk a lot and I uh what 2:47 else do I do I come to shows like this one and I talk at work camps and in fact 2:54 at workamp Yun last year that iRun is on in the north of Spain I gave a talk on 3:00 deceptive patterns and which I presented also workamp Europe last year but didn't 3:07 didn't hit a nerve so I didn't it didn't uh it wasn't accepted um so I'm very uh 3:12 happy to be here to talk about uh that today and thank you and uh if there are 3:20 people when the people who are watching live please comment and we will be able to address your comments uh live on the 3:27 show so uh please comment on 3:32 YouTube yeah so there's actually I what I'm always 3:37 wondering is we've been you started you did a really great int introduction thank you but is everybody aware of what 3:44 deceptive patterns are is what I want that's a good what are deceptive 3:50 patterns let's start from a story so 3:55 when I was little maybe I was seven or eight I uh went to a birthday party and I was 4:03 known for being I was very outgoing really happy child and could always take a joke also I had a a brother who's four 4:11 years older than me so I was used to being mistreated I was fine you know you know I could I could take it so I went 4:18 to this uh birthday party was outside in a garden uh in the summer in Italy and 4:25 uh the mother of the of uh the child whose birth was said look we're going to 4:32 do a game and you're going to be the protagonist and it's a really fun game 4:37 and without you we can't do it because you're the best as at you're the you're the one with the best sense of humor and 4:43 you're the best and so can you do it and I'm like yeah of course you know she she 4:49 flattered me so much and made me think like I was going to be the queen of the party so I said of course and 4:55 she um blindfolded me and the game consist Ed in me being Guided by the 5:02 kids shouting and telling me no go this way go this way I'd forgotten i' forgotten the main dets seven I was 5:08 seven a long time ago now so the and I would be guided and I think someone also 5:14 held my hands and then at some point the screaming became so so loud because I 5:20 think there was a there was a big prize for me at the end if I made it to the end there there was a big prize that I 5:27 would win and what the prize was was was that I 5:32 ended full full you know face flat into 5:37 a paddling pool so the end was it of it was the ludum horror humiliation 5:46 everybody laughing at me and yeah I was mortified I was absolutely mortified I 5:55 went silent completely silent for the rest for the rest of the of the part part because also I remember that I had 6:01 a hole in my socks and I was so ashamed because the the woman clearly gave me a change of clothes and I was so ashamed 6:10 that she would see the hole in my socks and I was horrified that I was duped 6:16 into trusting this woman that made me feel so important and so essential and 6:22 then everybody was laughing at me he wasn't laughing with meing you all along 6:27 the way until you're on your face honestly I when I I really absolutely sh 6:36 when I think about it and that's bait and switch it's basically when you are they make you think that something's 6:44 going to happen and then it's not sorry I'm going to drag out my folder where I 6:49 have a few of my hall of Shame examples I think there was a very famous example a few years ago of a Windows update that 6:58 made you do something very similar and then if you actually did click on it it would would have been an absolute 7:03 disaster I think um it was something like that so this is what this is what 7:11 uh yeah the I've got it here the latest this was from 2016 the latest Windows 10 7:19 upgrade in 2016 dialogue contains a huge bait and switch when a user clicks the 7:26 red x button in the top right top right expecting to dismiss the upgrade because 7:33 interface X Red X that's what happens the upgrade actually 7:39 initializes and I have never owned a Windows computer but I am told that 7:44 upgrades especially a few years ago could be deadly so this was a really famous one of bet and switch and to me 7:52 that's the story that the story that I it's just it's a bit extreme because you 7:58 are that was like extreme humiliation but it's basically it's a manipula 8:03 manipulation that happens all the time and um the time like pushing and 8:10 encouraging a specific action that at the end of the day you don't want to 8:15 happen at all exactly and deceiving you into thinking that it 8:22 would it will be of advantage to you but it isn't and an interesting thing to 8:27 note is that the term used to be it used to be known as dark patterns rather than 8:34 deceptic patterns and then dark patterns is not really appropriate for a number 8:39 of reasons thetive patterns is way better and the uh person who uh started 8:45 talking about deceptive patterns is a someone called Dr Harry 8:52 brignell uh he's the founder of the deceptive patn initiative and head of 8:57 innovation a smart pension and the website that used to be called uh dark 9:03 patterns is now de deceptive. design and I mention him 9:09 because he deserves it but also because he's got a very good definition very good and very simple definition of 9:17 deceptive patterns deceptive patterns are tricks used in websites and apps 9:23 that make you do things that you didn't mean to like buying or signing up for 9:29 something for example trick wording sneaking obstruction but there are many 9:35 many many types of deceptive patterns and and so many show up in our daily 9:41 lives and we're so used to them that we don't realize they are we don't have to put out with them really and it's one of 9:48 those things that when you when you realize what it is then you can't stop 9:54 seeing them and you start thinking no I don't want this I don't deserve this so 10:02 it's important that we start uh learning about them because I think that we might 10:08 inadvertently use them because some of them are actual marketing I I wouldn't 10:15 call them strategies I would rather use the the word um tactics but yeah they 10:21 are there's there's marketing tactics but then there's also you made me think of uh deceptive patterns as default set 10:29 settings in plugins and themes and that default settings that are not the 10:34 correct default is also it's deceptive in a way but it's also deceptive C 10:41 patterns can be unintentionally implemented in your code um and I was 10:46 just thinking I'm going to pick on Easy Digital downloads a software plug-in that I love I we host everything on Ed 10:53 uh and yet they when you set up a new price ID the default recurring timeline 11:00 is one day so I know multiple people who have set up uh accidentally recurring 11:07 invoices for customers with like hundred of dollar plugins that repeat every single day because to me with Ed you're 11:15 right yes and so it's not a deceptive pattern it's just a bug it's like 11:20 unimplemented it's like a bad it's just they hadn't they haven't fixed it yet but it's it treats itself like deceptive 11:28 patterns can being unintentional is what I'm trying to say accidentally deceptive 11:34 setting and that the defaults are powerful and the the defaults that we choose to enable in our checkout process 11:40 for example and having like opin uh marketing checked by default uh 11:47 that is a default setting sometimes and uh like by having by presenting 11:53 customers with the default of off that more honest than having a default of on 11:58 for op yeah marke this is something that uh with the 12:04 gdpr plugins for instance uh this happens so much a lot and gdpr is one of 12:10 the laws that however annoying it is it was actually set up to protect people 12:15 but the point is that a lot of the plugins the ones that have toggle 12:21 options first of all already I shouldn't even be there because it's either accept or reject that that's what needs to be 12:28 there sometimes there's an extra click and you have to go and adjust and some of them all the toggles are 12:35 on and and it's like no I shouldn't be doing this usually unless I really need 12:41 that website when when that is the case I just leave the site there is no way 12:46 that I am I don't trust you you're not you're not trustworthy I can't trust 12:52 you y so why is this topic important for WordPress product 12:57 owners because that's an excellent 13:04 question because I think I might be a uh 13:10 I might be a romantic it's perfectly possible that I am but I firmly believe that ethical design ultimately is much 13:18 better business than unethical design and which leads me to the concept of 13:24 ethical design which is a relatively new discipline there's a fantastic book called ethical design by Trina falbe I 13:31 can I can I'll drop the can can I drop the link in the chat I can can't I yeah 13:39 I can put it here um and it it's it's like 13:46 accessibility yes you will be fined yes it's better business because you will uh 13:52 be you have you will have a bigger audience but I do believe that ultimately ethical design it's Better 13:59 Business than than unethical design I've just seen a question from Amber which is 14:05 a texbook textbook example of a deceptive pattern I can't recall the 14:11 exact definition for it I don't think it matters but Amber is asking how about popups for optins well the language is 14:18 something negative like no thanks I don't care about making money it's awful 14:23 this is a typical deceptive pattern and the thing is that I have seen it done I an example of this in my hall of shame 14:33 that is incredible it's you have like is this like a presentation you have your 14:38 hall of Shame like is this something sharable or I um I didn't so this one 14:44 that I'm talking about yeah I have a few in myun uh keynote but I I never did the 14:51 the English version because it wasn't accepted but I uh didn't insert this one 14:58 because I think I mentioned it maybe because I I do a show with Nathan Wrigley on uxui we've just opened the 15:05 new season today and at the end we always do a section on deceptive patterns so um this is something that I 15:14 think I shared there but I don't know if I had actually the heart of showing it because this is someone I know and I 15:20 know she's a good person and she's done something terrible so she's a cancer 15:26 survivor and she published a book to help cancer survivors 15:33 and her message the version of Amber the Amber is is referring that kind of thing 15:40 that Amber is referring to at the bottom the the yes button is yes I want to help 15:47 to change my cancer story The no button says no thanks 15:54 please do not add this life a affirming offer to 15:59 oh my gosh oh my God it just it absolutely is is shocking 16:04 and the thing is that she the the initial offer the book I bought the book 16:10 to help out it's like $7 this is this additional offer is £ 16:18 397 it's a lot of money and also it's really specifically for cancer survivors 16:24 which I'm not you don't know if I am or not yeah I think for me the the thing 16:30 about deceptive patterns is that uh the question that product owners should ask 16:35 themselves is what is your relationship with customers and are you in to are you 16:41 in only to make money and you don't care about the customers or you actually trying to do the best by the customers 16:46 and develop a working relationship that lasts for years and is based on trust and and honesty and integrity and I 16:53 think that the tricking customers is not a good business to be in and absolutely 16:59 and regarding that popup for example shaming people is not a good business to be in don't treat people badly uh is a 17:08 good kind of foundational starting point yeah be really easy to think about those 17:14 things as like oh it was just tongue and cheek but like your users don't know you and they don't know your sense of humor 17:20 and they don't experience it and you don't know what's going on in their lives at the moment like those types of things can just come across so badly I 17:27 mean I think when comes to like why I I think of this one is terms of why is it relevant to Wordpress product owners and 17:35 generally speaking I think it's because deceptive patterns are something that we 17:41 tend to think about uh from a product marketing perspective because of how 17:47 difficult it is for uh premium products in particular to have a relationship 17:54 with their customers and that we have so many restrictions uh around us in terms of the freemium uh 18:03 model um with wordpress.org that it's that you have to get so creative to 18:09 think about how can I the the term that's used de anonymize U my free users 18:14 like how can I get to understand who my free users are how can I get to see uh if they're upgrading or not or if the 18:21 features that I have or what they want or not uh when I don't even have a relationship with them when they install 18:28 my plugin in the first place so we have to get so creative that like it makes us think of like I I'll just like ask them 18:36 for their email in this way that's really not asking them for their email like or I'll just like glean some 18:42 information in ways that they probably don't think I'm gleaning information and it's like and it won't really hurt them 18:48 like it was not going to be a big thing and I just need it to do this and that and the other it's a slippery slope into 18:55 into essentially losing um trust with our users essentially but uh I'm not trying to like Pawn off responsibility 19:02 and say well it's because things are hard in WordPress but I do think that because of our circumstances it kind of 19:08 makes us think in a lot more of this kind of path um because our options are 19:14 so limited generally speaking so yeah I think that in this case so maybe there 19:20 is something wrong with the model though if they could be you know I think it's a legitimate idea to float perhaps it 19:27 could be or because for instance a course creators that upload their 19:33 courses to udemy don't have a direct they can email their um course uh the 19:40 people who their students but they not directly it's all through udemy and again that's a huge limitation still not 19:47 a a good reason but it is in this case specifically I think 19:53 maybe uh the model is not it's is old enough now to maybe rethink I don't know 20:00 but anyway I'm not going to go into that because Al I I don't know enough about it but in terms of how it's relevant to 20:07 Wordpress product product owners I work with a lot of uh WordPress products and 20:14 this is one of the things that I do I point out the things that create 20:19 friction whether you realize it or not and if you irritate me if there's 20:25 someone else that offers me the same product without irritating me you can count on 20:31 me going to them because why should I choose you and I mean there are very few products that don't have any competition 20:37 are there because there are and it's so so obvious when a product really is just 20:45 about the good of the customers it's really so and I firmly believe in what I 20:52 call the ux value someone called Joni who's a great ux petitioner actually 20:58 came up with a term the ux value Loop he calls it and it's when it's where it's 21:04 the sweet spot where the users need meet the business's goals because if the 21:10 business doesn't make money as you were saying Matt that can't be good ux you you described exactly the right 21:16 situation where the ux value Loop can't happen because it's very hard for the 21:22 business to find a sweet spot where the not only the customer gets value but also the business so that is the tricky 21:30 bit and that's one of the things that I uh strive to do with uh with my work 21:37 with WordPress products and it's things that sometimes are in build in your 21:43 product one of them like I'm going to quote like a mention a really simple one 21:48 which is uh if you're selling a software as a service that is that has a sub 21:57 subscription model are you sending an email a few days before renewal this is so simple if 22:05 you're not you may make people feel trapped like skillshare which is a 22:10 course platform never did that to me and I realized two years after not using the 22:16 product that i' given them $200 without ever entering the platform because it was using a card I didn't really look at 22:23 so that's another deceptive pattern so this is one simple way in which you can 22:29 help your customer and I don't think it costs anything well it good question 22:35 that's one that I dig into quite a lot that's one that we deal with on the customer success side of things and the 22:41 there is actually some real good math that people can do like essentially what do you feel like is a worst experience 22:47 for your customer that they get charged um unexpectedly and then demand a refund 22:53 or that they cancel their subscription before they get charged um of course 22:59 when you start pushing out email reminders ahead of an annual renewal in particular annual renewals are a much 23:05 bigger deal than monthly of course so if you're not sending out an a renewal ahead of time you're going to see your 23:11 renewal rate dip because people are like oh I want to cancel that before that happens but if you do it you should also 23:18 see that your refunds on renewals also dip a ton and from what we're seeing in 23:24 a little bit of a test of what we're doing at Stellar right now we're actually calculating that that actually 23:30 is a plus for us that we actually have fewer refunds um and fewer um and and 23:39 not as much of a hit on the renewal rate um which ends up being a positive um and 23:45 I think that I think generally speaking that goes towards the whole idea of like doing the ethical way to do it actually 23:51 is good for business uh not only is it better for the customer themselves but it also results in better Revenue um so 23:59 I totally agree with you on that one yeah we're we're in the business of only 24:04 taking customers money who want to give us money and tricking people into giving us money or not canceling their 24:10 subscription is not a good business to be in because you're always basing it on 24:16 lies and deception and I I have a question for you though is it bad 24:21 customer experience this is related to one of the comments we have in in the live chat is that bad customer 24:26 experience uh to have ongoing sales that just like never end is that a bad 24:32 customer experience is that deceptive pattern or what is that do they think 24:38 we're idiots do they think we will not notice yes that is a really really bad 24:45 one or like the the fake Black Friday just to be on on season seasonal theme 24:52 that that in the end you realize that it's not really a discount it's just that you've infl at the price and now 24:59 you've you taken it off but really you're cashing the same thing or the you know if like the buy buy uh buy three 25:09 got two it makes that's what it makes you feel like instead of you know so yes I would absolutely say that the 25:16 Perpetual say is sale is a deceptive pattern without a doubt it's 25:22 manipulative fake yeah I think what that's grounded in um is every marketer 25:29 will say that um you have to drive a sense of urgency um uh in these types of 25:35 things and I think that folks have to learn how to actually do sales um to 25:42 actually run discount campaigns um in order to drive urgency instead of just 25:47 having like Perpetual there's no such thing as like Perpetual urgency like that's a oxymoron um so if you're going 25:55 to run a discount sale run a discount sale and then be like no literally 26:00 tomorrow is the last day and we're not gonna do this again um or you know not 26:06 for a while at least so and that's that's exactly what Black Friday uh campaigns are built upon is that this is 26:13 happening right now um and if you look across all of our Stellar sites in particular they're all saying exactly 26:20 when the dates are now there might be like a couple Brands who might be like oh a surprise extension we're going to 26:25 do one more extra day and that totally happens sometimes s maybe it's even planned ahead of time a little bit um 26:31 but it doesn't change the fact that like the sale actually physically ends um and 26:37 this is the time to buy um and we go around telling people folks telling folks that that like this is the time if 26:43 you were ever thinking about getting a whole bunch of these things now is the best time to do it so yeah so thank you Matt for uh 26:51 mentioning scarcity and the sense of urgency which is something that was actually mentioned in the in the 26:58 comments I think by Kevin um because that's something that has a lot to do 27:05 with ethical design and how and how 27:10 deceptive patterns uh actually are an accessibility matter and there's an really great example in the ethical 27:17 design book that I mentioned earlier which is about let me find it because I made an I made a note of it so some 27:25 people with certain types of illnesses can be hugely affected by manipulative design patterns people with dyslexia for 27:33 instance may find those W weird wordings that are meant to shame you really 27:39 confusing or if you have the example that's in the book she says um she it's 27:46 a someone called uh someone who called Bruce who has multiple sclerosis which 27:52 is a disease in which the insulating covers of nerve cells in the brain and 27:58 spinal cord are damaged damaged this damage disrupts the ability of parts of the nervous nervous system to 28:04 communicate resulting in a range of signs and symptoms including physical mental and 28:10 sometimesy psychiatric problems sorry I mangled that word but never mind so Bruce when 28:19 his Ms is playing up experiences actual physical symptoms 28:25 because it triggers his MS for instance he's saying when he's confronted with 28:30 intrusive intrusive nags such as only two rooms left 900 people are looking at 28:36 this right now five seconds left before you lose the deal of a lifetime and 28:41 things like that he says um my heart races adrenaline kicks in and it leaves me feeling shaky and tired given that 28:49 fatigue is also very Comm I'm reading the quote given the fatigue is also a very common symptom of aess I don't need 28:56 extra help in becoming tired and really do we need to do that and he cites um 29:03 travel and travel uh websites Ryan 29:09 a you well people haven't flown if people haven't flown Ryan Air it's kind 29:15 of worth flying Ryan air just to experience the deceptive patterns that they Implement same with Spirit Airlines 29:22 in the US uh fly spirit and you'll know what Peach is talking about here oh but the same time it's it highlights so much 29:29 why Southwest in the states is so amazing like I love with Southwest you always know exactly what you're buying 29:35 and nothing more like it's it's always just like so simp and you only buy it from them and you're you're GNA get your 29:42 seat and like it's they make everything simple it just highlights the huge difference and I feel like I feel like 29:49 they zeroed in on that they look they looked at all the other US Airlines and how hyper sensitive and and how chaotic 29:55 and how intense everything was and they're like let's just make everything easy instead um I mean they're not 30:01 they're not perfect no Airline is perfect but like I feel like they zeroed in on that like let's get rid of the 30:06 stress in Airline stuff um as much as possible and I think that that should 30:12 speak really highly of products too WordPress products should be able to dial in and say like I I kind of there 30:19 was a early in the give I I've mentioned this a couple times the first like three or four years I give WP I was really 30:26 like a op about we don't do discounts like ever under any circumstance we never did them for at least like four 30:33 years and it was because our target audience were nonprofit organizations like what's your nonprofit discount like 30:39 why would we have a nonprofit discount they're all supposed to be nonprofit so we're pricing it towards the value that 30:46 you're supposed to get why would we discount it um I love the Simplicity of 30:52 it and in many ways I had people who who would respond and be like I actually really appreciate that um 30:57 and I I we we did start doing discounts and I actually did see counter to my hopes and aspirations that there were 31:05 plenty of buyers who really would specifically buy because of the 15% off 31:10 discount which just baffled me I just didn't understand and that's one of those marketing things where it's like 31:16 even though we would love for for some of these practices to not be be true 31:22 they're based on actual like psychological things like there is like when there is a of urgency people do 31:28 tend to buy a little bit quicker like and that that doesn't mean that we should like lean into it so heavily but 31:35 I'm just saying like as much as as much as these tactics in my mind can get 31:41 overblown they are based on actual like data as well um and you kind of have to 31:48 be able to navigate between like well I don't want to just say don't do anything 31:53 um that actually works you know um I need to be able to to navigate it correctly 31:59 so yeah just a little bit of the push back on some of this stuff because we 32:04 need a a third voice and and we if we're all like yeah all of this is terrible then then it's not a fun show so I have 32:11 to be a little bit of the push back here no no I think it's an essential point to 32:17 make because that's the point that a lot of people make they say yeah but they work and thex loop value Loop that I 32:25 mentioned earlier does mean that you as a company need to make money because otherwise you can't offer anything to 32:30 your customer let alone let alone a deceptive pattern my point is though 32:36 that I mean a discount is really one is it a deceptive pattern it I I don't like 32:44 them I don't want to offer them because it makes me think whoa so it does it mean that my offer before was pumped up 32:52 why would for L Mone conly inflating my prices yeah I know especially because 32:57 it's not like I mean with clothes I understand because you need to get rid of them they're on the shelves but with 33:02 a digital product it's not like uh you know it's gowp is a bit stale or actually you know I'll give you I'll 33:08 give you the the the not updated version for less money it's like it doesn't work 33:14 like that so uh even though this for instance the ethical design book it's 33:19 this is a an aspect that it uh touches on and it's I've got a quote here um 33:27 some companies are bound to to be able to prove that dark patterns convert better than ethical design patterns 33:33 maybe however what can happen when a dark pattern is discovered by users and 33:39 afterwards shared publicly is that conversion drops and your reputation drops and your brand uh perception drops 33:48 as well I don't I honestly do not think that it ever pays and I've seen it 33:53 happen so much like I remember for instance a very famous uh online course 34:01 for um WordPress Community people they kept doing you know they they were 34:06 really good a very good product but they kept doing this kind of stuff and you would be in the program and realize that 34:14 what you pay like three times as much than the person who enrolled enrolled 34:19 three months after you were like why and it it was so bad and I know know people 34:24 you know in the end left and they were just not happy with it anymore and there was a membership site so potentially 34:30 people could have could have left and that again is you know a membership is a product I have seen products that I have 34:37 worked with I don't know if I'm allowed to mention an ethical product that I've worked with but I was astounded at how 34:47 their focus was so much just on the client on the customer that I actually 34:54 had to tell them you got to be a bit more selfish here I don't get the Yuk's value Lube because you do too much for 35:00 your customer are you sure you're making enough money so you it can be done I 35:07 really will die on this hill that it can be done and I know so many entrepreneurs 35:13 that uh that do I'm thinking right now of examples outside the word WordPress 35:19 environment but I know people who sell courses and they have built an Empire 35:27 selling courses for membership for $99 a year and they're 35:34 multi-millionaires and they could sell the same thing for 2,000 a year easy 35:40 easy easy easy and they do 99 and they're multimillionaires and they work 10 hours a a a week 35:48 so I I think this is a good time to transition into story time and picha you 35:54 talked about your story already with uh being tricked into being made to look foolish which is 36:01 very cruel um I uh I have a story that 36:07 kind of touches on the the Allure and the problems with deceptive patterns which is uh the cancellation flow for 36:15 subscriptions um so I use a lot of uh products by 36:21 awesome motive uh I'm going to name them awesome motive does this and I think everybody in WordPress know knows that 36:27 they do this so I might as well say the say their name out loud um when you go to cancel awesome mode of products uh 36:33 there are you have to go through the ringer you have multiple steps where they try to convince you not to cancel 36:40 yeah and each of the steps uh plays on a different psychology it makes a lot of 36:47 sense like uh you go through one step and it says well is if this if you 36:52 select that you're canceling because of money they'll show you on the next step uh Hey keep your subscription we'll give 36:59 you 50% off the next year and we'll throw in these other couple things that are nice too and you say like uh I want 37:05 to keep cancelling and then it says oh are you sure because we have a great team of support if there's something wrong we're happy to help you have to 37:11 keep on clicking yes yes yes I want to cancel so when we looked at our own 37:16 cancellation flow because making thing Mak making it too easy to cancel can be a problem for customers because if 37:24 people don't have an active subscription they don't get support they don't get updates they don't get the added value 37:30 that you provide so we want to provide our customers with the most value if they cancel they do lose some of our 37:36 value that's the whole point of the of the ux uh the flow so we wanted to 37:43 figure out how to make a good subscription flow for ourselves so we condensed all of the reasons why they 37:48 shouldn't cancel onto one page put in a list and at the bottom of the list yes I still want to cancel and we wanted to 37:56 find out why why they are cancelling so we have a little why are you cancelling form at the bottom uh the cancellation 38:01 form at the bottom allows them to cancel right away and then it has follow-up questions that are emailed to them after 38:08 they cancel that are based on their responses that say Hey if you want to reactivate here's the reason why you 38:14 should reactivate based on your cancellation reason we think it's a good idea here's an easy way to do it uh in 38:21 advance of Black Friday this this year I uh I was looking at our cancellation flow again and I realized because we 38:28 recently changed our pricing that one of the things customers might not know about is that our their locked in 38:34 subscription rate is lower and if they cancel they will not have that access to 38:39 that same lower rate so I added a a notice at the top of the cancellation page that calculates the amount that 38:45 they're currently saving and says hey if you cancel you will not have access to this lower price yeah so I'm trying to 38:52 find a balance between using information that's help for the 38:58 customer trying to convince them on on our on our merits that they should not cancel and following up with reasons 39:05 they provide but not allowing not preventing them from cancelling in a way that's easy for I want to like I want to 39:11 like wave a hanky or something bring out the choir that's a 39:17 great one I mean so many people so many people are so pissed off about the way 39:22 awesome motive does that I have gone through it it is terrible it is torturous 39:27 um and I took notes too just like it's impressive yeah I took screenshots it's a magnum opus yeah yeah they're like 39:34 taking every single psychological reason and walking you through all of them like certain that one of them will ring true 39:41 for you um I love your your your middle ground there that sounds awesome yeah 39:46 that's that's very what you're doing is you're giving very helpful information the only thing that I hope is that the 39:52 form is not compulsory because really maybe I don't want to tell you right now don't for is not 39:58 compulsory right or the form is compulsory but that you you can just click the submit button without filling 40:05 out anything fields are required but yeah that's fine so that's I didn't know 40:10 whether you were allowed to mention people because uh Nathan Wrigley who's 40:15 one of the nicest most we do whatever we want you can say whatever you like okay 40:21 so the so in that case uh the the company that I thought was too good to 40:28 the customers was paid memberships Pro I was like oh they are they're great really is there any limit to the 40:34 free to people so ironically Kim is the 40:39 like me and Kim started this show together a long time ago really I didn't 40:45 know that well they're they're are they're awesome but because the thing is 40:50 that what we need to remember is that when people are doing something such as counseling or or buying a flight or 40:59 buying anything even for some people even buying a WordPress plug-in may be God knows how much research they've done 41:06 what's behind it what they're going to use it for how much money they have it's it can be a stressful moment so if you 41:14 make it so easy for them to buy it you need to make it as easy for them to come 41:21 off it when they need to and some of the back to the fear of missing out like the 41:28 you know the canceling thing you know wait a minute are you sure when it's done like that or using tricky wording 41:34 such as you know no thanks I I wanna I want to give up on the best plug-in that 41:40 ever existed something like that then people can have real anxiety attacks and 41:45 it really isn't even an exaggeration and they may think oh my God am I doing the right thing and start doubting 41:51 themselves especially if it's a client that maybe is not a what press expert 41:57 they don't know whether they're not entirely sure if they're doing the right thing and suddenly they're like oh maybe 42:03 not but they don't really want it so I think that that's something that's 42:09 really essential to bear in mind that we do not want to actually cause an anxiety 42:15 of attacking people that's never good yeah and and um Matt is probably 42:22 going to rejoin us soon but um the I saw a study that a few years ago that maybe 42:29 think of things uh that we can't do in digital world but the deceptive patterns 42:34 that exist uh in the physical world apparently when stores are warmer uh people buy less uh buy fewer 42:43 products at a lower price so keeping stores artificially cold is a way that 42:48 people can manipulate you into purchasing things so the just the the 42:55 amount of ways that people uh trick and deceive and manipulate psychology to to 43:02 make purchases happen is endless yeah that's an interesting one I 43:07 don't know I hate cold shops especially um clothes shops is like do you want me 43:13 to try this on or not because I'm not going to this is freaking cold so I find that a really weird one but but as a 43:21 general consideration we are really living in a very difficult 43:26 completely new age the digital age is still very young we're not used to it it's incredibly manipulative and it's a 43:34 surveillance Society it's basically surveillance capitalism so I mean WordPress prod products don't 43:43 necessarily do that but when I am pested by constant notices on the dashboard or 43:51 emails or uh you know things U messages FL crashing in in popups and things like 43:58 that I feel like you are monitoring me you you 44:03 are uh following my every move and it it 44:08 it it it bothers me a lot I mean I I I'm not going to go into what social media is doing in this sense of uh fear 44:15 missing out or U man manipulation and and all the terrible terrible things 44:20 that it's doing so I feel like it's our responsibility to do things ethically I 44:27 think that oh that's so sorry I just noticed very relevant to what I was 44:32 saying Kevin's question how do you draw the line on ethics is it subjective and 44:38 this is a conversation I've been having with some other WordPress World friends and one of them was saying well you 44:45 can't company are there to make money you can't expect them to be ethical as well unless there's a law prohibiting 44:53 them from doing certain things I don't actually agree with that and I 44:58 would be interested in if murder were legal would I go around murdering people that's the 45:06 question and it's yes they need to make money but they need to also make their 45:11 clients happy do both I mean like M making businesses sound so one-sided I 45:16 think is just so small-minded and it's just not the way like real business people operate either because like like 45:23 business people in general are not just trying to make money they're trying to build their team they're trying to provide a living for their for their 45:29 employees they're trying to build something that actually benefits the world in one way or another like we so 45:35 easily slip into this mindset where like the big corporation's out to get the little guy all the time which you know 45:41 has Merit but like so many businesses like the ones that we all run and are 45:47 part of are just like trying to do good work you know uh there is this little side conversation happening in over here 45:53 too that I want to clarify on a little bit um one of our co-hosts Amber is in the comments helping out and 46:01 um and Kevin is also saying um so discounts in general are deceptive just 46:07 accepted deception and that was to a conversation we were having earlier about discounts in general that like the 46:13 discounts work um and um and Amber is asking why why do you think that they 46:19 are deceptive because people don't expect the renewal at full price and that's really some of the kicker there 46:25 is that especially in the WordPress space um most often not always but most often uh they're providing a discount 46:32 for the first year only um and that is a highly deceptive practice when the 46:38 discount is presented and it's not made clear that it's for the first year only if it's like the there's a slash in the 46:45 price and here's your new price and it's not said discounts for first year only 46:51 uh the people buy in thinking like this is a great price I'm happy to pay this for for several years um and then they 46:56 find out that the next year is a lot more expensive than they expected that's completely unethical I would say so 47:03 that's one part of it but then our discounts themselves Uh Kevin follows up 47:09 um with a clarifying Matt was talking about how they are essentially a trick to get people to buy I really wasn't 47:15 trying to say that discounts are a trick to get people to buy they're an incentive that it tends to be an 47:21 incentive that that the studies actually say does actually work there are it's 47:27 there's something about our lizard brain that essentially is like more likely to 47:32 buy something um because it's discounted um like we're we were probably going to 47:37 buy that thing anyway uh but then like when we see that it's not discounted we're like H not today um but then it's 47:44 like oh I was probably going to buy this anyway it's 15% off right now then I'm gonna buy it um and that's the only 47:51 reason why they buy today instead of later uh because it happens to be discounted when they're looking at it um 47:57 so I don't think that that's necessarily deception uh it's literally giving people some money back of what they were 48:03 intending to to to purchase in the first place um but it is strategic and it is intentional but I do think the use of 48:10 discounts the way that you make sure that it's clear what are you getting with this discount is super important 48:16 and it can be a slippery slope into deceptive practices especially when it comes to any kind of subscription based 48:23 model on that note I have been doing some audits for a 48:31 hostinger and one of the things that they do and I mean that was the whole like kind of um 48:39 it felt like a an what's it called an obstacle race course a bit like R A but 48:44 anyway the the one of the things that um I pointed out to them is that uh they 48:53 give you they say that they give you a free domain but then in the end you realize it's not 48:58 a free domain it's free for a year so but it's written so small that I would 49:04 never have seen it and then in a year's time I have to pay for a domain that I only set up because it was the only way 49:10 I could actually move the site over so those are that's a kind of case where 49:17 you know you do a you do a it's not even a discount it's a free 49:22 thing and that is deceptive because you are going to to make me pay for something that I never would have got if 49:28 it hadn't been free in the first place and I actually do not I honestly do think that a lot of people that do this 49:35 do not stop and think this is unethical it's a deceptive pattern because some of these are like really have been taught 49:44 as marketing strategies for years and years and years and now people are starting to say actually no they're not 49:52 it's just bad it's wrong you you yeah tripping people that's it's a good point 49:58 too like there's no reason why we should take traditional things that have always been and always worked and just assumed 50:04 that they're continued to be okay um things definitely are moving and and and towards towards the good I would say so 50:12 for the next generation of product owners who are watching this show or listening to it uh what do you recommend 50:18 what's your best advice for new product owners start from the this start from my 50:28 best advice is find that sweet spot that I've been mentioning since the beginning 50:34 always ask yourself well hopefully when you actually get the product started 50:40 from the very beginning ask yourself where is that magical place where I make 50:46 a lot of money because that's what we all want I actually firmly believe that we all you know the world would be a 50:52 better place if everybody had loads of money and it's possible so where is that really wonderful place 50:58 where my business thrives and makes a lot of money but also my customers have 51:04 their problem solved and they love us for it how can I make that happen that 51:10 is the best advice I can give and I am 51:15 kind of pretty sure that that happens with ethical design and not with deceptive patterns and fine print fine 51:23 print there's a common mentioning fine print yeah no fine print I don't care if 51:29 it always existed it's horrible and it is painful and it only helps the 51:37 business maybe but unless I misunderstood the the unless I'm misunderstood the com comment but the 51:43 way I understood it fine PR print things are things that get Miss uh we whoops 51:53 wrong one hold on we should definitely bring that up that's my my partner in crime for a long time Devin Walker 51:59 coming in the comments fine print is nothing new it's common practice everywhere including in WordPress 52:04 totally true are you suggesting we get rid of fine print offers I 52:10 would I think there there is a sense in which there are like the fine print offer in which like the fine print is so 52:16 tiny that no human can read it I think that we absolutely 100% should get rid of that crap that that's garbage but I 52:23 think the purpose and the intention behind a fine print offer is that this discount or this offer has limitations 52:30 in one form or another and the fine print gives you the opportunity to make those limitations explicit I think that 52:36 that's excellent if if you need to put some sort of limitations around an offer in one form or another you absolutely 52:42 should be explicit about that but you should make sure that those guidelines or those limitations are legible that's 52:49 the only difference like let's make sure that somebody uh can read them and they don't need a microscope in order to read 52:55 them yeah so Apple yeah does this everywhere and I don't think that Apple 53:01 are a particularly ethical company they're super successful fine but I I 53:06 was a super early Apple adopter I my sister used to call me the Apple Taliban 53:12 I love them so much I was absolutely fanatic about them they've lost me entirely I only keep buying their 53:19 products because I don't have a choice I don't really have a choice but if I could I can assure you I would not buy 53:27 and that's quite funny bump up one pixel fun I would not buy Apple because the way also their products they're built is 53:33 very shady there's it doesn't the fact that a company is successful doesn't mean it's e ethical and I mean we 53:40 haven't even touched on Airbnb which don't activate me on on that point but I 53:48 actually really we we do need to wrap up I would love to hear Zach's best advice yes uh so my best advice that I find is 53:56 really helpful is saying what you're about to do to someone else out loud and 54:02 seeing how you feel about it while you're saying it if you feel like you're getting away with something if you feel 54:07 like or if you feel like you're being uh tricky or if you feel a sense of Shame 54:12 take another pass at it don't do it don't do it wonderful advice yeah I love 54:20 that that's a really good one I think my best advice is literally keep it simple like I I really think in general uh 54:27 don't try to complicate stuff with all kinds of like caveats and weird quirks and things like that if it's not really 54:34 clear what's going on on your sale or on your product that's the problem the problem isn't that people aren't buying 54:40 it's not that you need to trick them uh it's not that you need to do something flashy and special it's just that you 54:45 need to be clear and simple and straightforward um and once your offer and your value is super clear the people 54:53 who need it will buy it um so I I would just always try to keep it simple so 55:00 cool cool well Pacha this was amazing I'm so glad we had you on and and such a timely topic too right right before 55:07 Black Friday so watch out for Black Friday don't judge my email flow please 55:12 it's there's a lot of fear missing out on my email flow I'm sorry nobody's 55:17 perfect right that's we can always strive to be better nice thank you so much for having 55:23 me was so much fun absolutely uh Zach do you know what we got going on next 55:29 week uh Matt I don't but I do want to thank uh post status for being our Green 55:34 Room uh if you're enjoying these shows uh listening to them or watching them live please hit like subscribe share 55:41 with your friends add us to your newsletters um and Matt uh what is what is going on next week if you could bring 55:49 us in on the loop oh Matt has frozen so I uh hope to 55:54 see you all next week thank you so much Pacha it's been a pleasure and goodbye bye