Thereâs an underestimated tool on your website that holds the key to business growth. If you use it well.
What am I talking about? I'm referring to the simple form tool that we use to create contact forms and other means of getting inputs from users.Â
Forms are the basis of many interactions online. We carry out searches by entering keywords in a form field and then hitting âSearchâ, we send messages via forms, we enter shipping and billing details with forms, and do so much more.
It makes sense that improving how you build forms will also improve user experience (UX). And as a result, youâll build leads, get more customers, and engage with people better.Â
Now letâs take a look at practical ways you can leverage forms and improve UX on your website. Here we go.Â
Create conversational forms
Are you experiencing form abandonment? A large number of people who start filling your forms actually leave without hitting submit. This happens when your form is confusing, unintuitive, or too long.
When you do need to collect a lot of data for things like surveys, itâs necessary to create multiple fields. In such cases, you need to find a way to make it engaging and interesting even though there are several fields that need to be filled.
This is where conversational forms come in. A conversational form is where questions appear as if theyâre being typed in real-time. And only one question is asked at a time. So when people respond to the form question, itâs like sending a chat message.Â
Conversational forms remove the feeling that a user is filling a static form and is having a dynamic and more interesting experience instead.Â
If youâre seeing low form conversions or just want to optimize your surveys to get the most feedback, make use of conversational forms.Â
Add multi-page forms and breadcrumbs
Another way to get people to fill long forms is by creating your form in a multi-page layout. Here, your form is spread across different pages that people get to once theyâve finished the current form page.Â
By breaking down your form into bite-sized pieces, it removes mental fatigue as users enter data. Youâve probably already used multi-paged forms while making payments or applying for jobs. Breaking up your form in this way also removes the need for people to scroll down too far and ensures that the input theyâve already given is saved.Â
Hereâs another feature you can add that makes your multi-page form user-friendly: breadcrumbs.Â
Breadcrumbs are visual cues that tell people where they are on your form or website. It lets them know how far along they are on your form and how much more is left to complete.Â
This creates mental ease and gives the sense of making progress as a user completes the form.
Use conditional logic
Conditional logic is a form feature where you display certain questions based on the choices a user makes. For example, if youâre using forms to get job applications, then depending on the role a person selects, theyâll get questions related to that role. A person who is applying for the role of a developer would then be shown a dropdown list consisting of qualifications or skills that they can pick. Â
Using conditional logic means that you only ask the right questions and get relevant answers. And your users wonât have to answer generic questions that waste their time.Â
Another way that you can use conditional logic is by creating custom messages for different form responses. If a customer makes an inquiry, your success message can thank them and ask them to wait for 24 hours for a response.Â
Or, if a customer wants to get information for an event, you can automatically assign such queries to people or departments in your business that deal with events. Itâs also possible to redirect customers to different pages once they complete and submit their form.Â
If theyâve signed up for an event, you can take them to a page with a countdown timer thatâs ticking down until the event takes place. Or if they subscribed to your newsletter, you can send them to your blog page to start reading.Â
There are many ways to leverage conditional logic. Look for ways to personalize interactions on your website using forms and youâre certain to see higher conversion rates soon.Â
Auto-fill content
The less work your audience has to perform on your website, the happier theyâll be. Auto-filling some form fields based on your page links or user behavior will make less work for your audience.Â
For example, if your user is on your product pricing page and wants to send a message asking for more information, a form that popups from that page could automatically fill the subject field with appropriate text like âIâd like to know more about this productâ. Users could add to it, send it as is, or replace the text.Â
You can also enable a dynamic field population, where users whoâve entered information about themselves once before will find future forms automatically filled.Â
Make custom form landing pages
One of the issues faced with using forms on WordPress is that the theme controls what a form looks like. And because of this issue, youâre very limited when it comes to designing your form.Â
One way to overcome this is by creating a dedicated form landing page. You build a single landing page with almost no other content except your form. Youâll have control over how it appears by managing spacing, sizes, colors, and more.Â
Building a landing page for your forms gives you more control over your form's appearance.
This helps your audience to focus on the form and prevents users from feeling overwhelmed or distracted by other content.Â
Over to you
Forms are simple but powerful tools and often underestimated by businesses. It is critical that you use a good form plugin to create the best chance of making a positive user experience for users.Â
Along with sending messages, forms are important tools that help you gather leads, get payments, and even get blog post submissions.Â
Invest in the right tool and make sure that you create ease for customers who want to interact with your business. In this way, youâll grow your business fast.