Creating Brand or Product Awareness and the User Experience

| 5 min read
474 shares

The user experience for your customers often doesn’t start when they arrive at your web page or when they first open your shiny application on their smartphone or tablet; it starts the very first time they encounter your brand. The “awareness” phase as marketers call it. This is the moment when a potential customer is aware of you and hasn’t yet decided that they need (or want) your product.

To ensure a consistent user experience it can be a good idea to focus on a few key ideas as you create your awareness campaigns:

Measure Engagement



Author/Copyright holder: Ben Watkin. Copyright terms and licence: CC BY-NC 2.0

If you are creating a high quality UX through your awareness efforts; it stands to reason that you will be creating good levels of user engagement. You need to determine some KPIs for this (and review them regularly). You might consider some of the following:

  • Page views
  • Bounce rates
  • Total hits
  • Impressions
  • CTR (Click Through Rates)
  • Etc.

Split Test for Reactions



Author/Copyright holder: Alexander Baxevanis. Copyright terms and licence: CC BY 2.0

Create some simple sites and make sure that you A/B test your copy and images to create the right level of engagement with your users. This can also be applied to any other advertising content that you release and even to your e-mail marketing campaigns.

Consistency in Search

Your adverts should deliver on their promises. This is particularly true in SEO and SEM delivered adverts. Are your links providing the information or reason that someone clicked on the link in the first place? If not – change them until they do.

Develop Credibility

One of the things that most people want to know during the awareness phase is; “can I trust this brand/product/company?” The placement of your advertising can help build this credibility or destroy it. For example; the Pirate Bay (until its recent troubles) hosts plenty of adverts but would your users trust you more when they find that you are using a piracy website to push your products.

In most cases we’d argue that they wouldn’t. Whereas if your advert appears on CNNs home page (or something similar) there’s a good argument to say that this will improve your credibility with you users.

Check Imagery and Words

Part of the user experience is emotional. Adverts are supposed to create some form of emotional response in the viewer. Someone is much more likely to click an advert when it speaks to them on a subconscious level and encourages them to respond to their own needs. If you find that your CTR is particularly low – this is often the place to start.



Author/Copyright holder: Unknown. Copyright terms and licence: Unknown Img source

Are your words and images creating emotions or are they boring or worse a complete turn off to the user?

Soft Landings

When someone finally engages with your awareness campaign; is it easy for them to get right into doing business with you when they land on your website or app home page? Creating awareness is all well and good but it’s wasted if you can’t turn that awareness into action when the opportunity arises.

Header Image: Author/Copyright holder: Branderati. Copyright terms and licence: All rights reserved. Img


474 shares

Open Access—Link to us!

We believe in Open Access and the democratization of knowledge. Unfortunately, world-class educational materials such as this page are normally hidden behind paywalls or in expensive textbooks.

If you want this to change, , link to us, or join us to help us democratize design knowledge!

Share Knowledge, Get Respect!

Share on:

or copy link

Cite according to academic standards

Simply copy and paste the text below into your bibliographic reference list, onto your blog, or anywhere else. You can also just hyperlink to this article.

Interaction Design Foundation - IxDF. (2015, July 26). Creating Brand or Product Awareness and the User Experience. Interaction Design Foundation - IxDF.

New to UX Design? We're Giving You a Free eBook!

The Basics of User Experience Design

Download our free ebook “The Basics of User Experience Design” to learn about core concepts of UX design.

In 9 chapters, we’ll cover: conducting user interviews, design thinking, interaction design, mobile UX design, usability, UX research, and many more!

A valid email address is required.
315,214 designers enjoy our newsletter—sure you don’t want to receive it?

New to UX Design? We're Giving You a Free eBook!

The Basics of User Experience Design

Download our free ebook “The Basics of User Experience Design” to learn about core concepts of UX design.

In 9 chapters, we’ll cover: conducting user interviews, design thinking, interaction design, mobile UX design, usability, UX research, and many more!

A valid email address is required.
315,214 designers enjoy our newsletter—sure you don’t want to receive it?