In the realm of financial services, complexity isn't just a challenge, it's the default state. From intricate investment products to multi-layered insurance policies to complex fee structures, financial services are inherently complicated. But your users don't want complexity; they want confidence, clarity, and control over their financial lives.
How to keep things simple with good UX research
Understanding how users perceive and navigate complexity requires systematic research. Optimal's platform offers specialized tools to identify complexity pain points and validate simplification strategies:
Uncover Navigation Challenges with Tree Testing
Complex financial products often create equally complex navigation structures:
How can you solve this?
- Test how easily users can find key information within your financial platform
- Identify terminology and organizational structures that confuse users
- Compare different information architectures to find the most intuitive organization
Identify Confusion Points with First-Click Testing
Understanding where users instinctively look for information reveals valuable insights about mental models:
How can you solve this?
- Test where users click when trying to accomplish common financial tasks
- Compare multiple interface designs for complex financial tools
- Identify misalignments between expected and actual user behavior
Understand User Mental Models with Card Sorting
Financial terminology and categorization often don't align with how customers think:
How can you solve this?
- Use open card sorts to understand how users naturally group financial concepts
- Test comprehension of financial terminology
- Identify intuitive labels for complex financial products
Practical Strategies for Simplifying Financial UX
1. Progressive Information Disclosure
Rather than bombarding users with all information at once, layer information from essential to detailed:
- Start with core concepts and benefits
- Provide expandable sections for those who want deeper dives
- Use tooltips and contextual help for terminology
- Create information hierarchies that guide users from basic to advanced understanding
2. Visual Representation of Numerical Concepts
Financial services are inherently numerical, but humans don't naturally think in numbers—we think in pictures and comparisons.
What could this look like?
- Use visual scales and comparisons instead of just presenting raw numbers
- Implement interactive calculators that show real-time impact of choices
- Create visual hierarchies that guide attention to most relevant figures
- Design comparative visualizations that put numbers in context
3. Contextual Decision Support
Users don't just need information; they need guidance relevant to their specific situation.
How do you solve for this?
- Design contextual recommendations based on user data
- Provide comparison tools that highlight differences relevant to the user
- Offer scenario modeling that shows outcomes of different choices
- Implement guided decision flows for complex choices
4. Language Simplification and Standardization
Financial jargon is perhaps the most visible form of unnecessary complexity. So, what can you do?
- Develop and enforce a simplified language style guide
- Create a financial glossary integrated contextually into the experience
- Test copy with actual users, measuring comprehension, not just preference
- Replace industry terms with everyday language when possible
Measuring Simplification Success
To determine whether your simplification efforts are working, establish a continuous measurement program:
1. Establish Complexity Baselines
Use Optimal's tools to create baseline measurements:
- Success rates for completing complex tasks
- Time required to find critical information
- Comprehension scores for key financial concepts
- User confidence ratings for financial decisions
2. Implement Iterative Testing
Before launching major simplification initiatives, validate improvements through:
- A/B testing of alternative explanations and designs
- Comparative testing of current vs. simplified interfaces
- Comprehension testing of revised terminology and content
3. Track Simplification Metrics Over Time
Create a dashboard of key simplification indicators:
- Task success rates for complex financial activities
- Support call volume related to confusion
- Feature adoption rates for previously underutilized tools
- User-reported confidence in financial decisions
Where rubber hits the road: Organizational Commitment to Clarity
True simplification goes beyond interface design. It requires organizational commitment at the most foundational level:
- Product development: Are we creating inherently understandable products?
- Legal and compliance: Can we satisfy requirements while maintaining clarity?
- Marketing: Are we setting appropriate expectations about complexity?
- Customer service: Are we gathering intelligence about confusion points?
When there is a deep commitment from the entire organization to simplification, it becomes part of a businesses’ UX DNA.
Conclusion: The Future Belongs to the Clear
As financial services become increasingly digital and self-directed, clarity bcomes essential for business success. The financial brands that will thrive in the coming decade won't necessarily be those with the most features or the lowest fees, but those that make the complex world of finance genuinely understandable to everyday users.
By embracing clarity as a core design principle and supporting it with systematic user research, you're not just improving user experience, you're democratizing financial success itself.