- Joined
- Jun 28, 2024
- Messages
- 121
Hi everyone,
I've been tracking a fascinating trend over on Reddit recently that confirms something I've suspected for a while: we've reached a tipping point where "over-designing" is actually killing conversions.
I saw a case study recently comparing a high-end, professionally designed landing page against what I can only describe as a "1999-era" ugly page. The results? The ugly page didn't just win; it crushed the "premium" version.
Here’s why I think this is happening in 2026:
I've been tracking a fascinating trend over on Reddit recently that confirms something I've suspected for a while: we've reached a tipping point where "over-designing" is actually killing conversions.
I saw a case study recently comparing a high-end, professionally designed landing page against what I can only describe as a "1999-era" ugly page. The results? The ugly page didn't just win; it crushed the "premium" version.
Here’s why I think this is happening in 2026:
- Speed is King: The ugly page had almost zero bloat. No heavy JS libraries, no high-res background videos. It loaded instantly. In our world, especially with mobile traffic, every millisecond counts.
- The "Ad-Feel" Factor: Users are getting incredibly good at spotting polished marketing. A beautiful page screams "I'm trying to sell you something." The ugly page feels like a raw, authentic recommendation. It bypasses that immediate defensive reflex.
- Higher Trust via Simplicity: For certain verticals—especially Cleaners or utility apps—users just want the solution. They don't want a lifestyle brand experience. They want to know the tool works. Authenticity over aesthetics, every single time.


