A client once told me:
“Our product works… but users keep getting stuck.”
That sentence says a lot.
Because it means the problem isn’t technical.
It’s clarity.
The Situation
The product itself was solid.
Features were working.
The API was functional.
Documentation existed.
But still:
• New users struggled to get started
• The same questions kept coming up
• Onboarding felt slower than it should
Nothing was broken.
But something was off.
What I Noticed First
I didn’t start by rewriting everything.
I started by asking one question:
👉 “What does a new user try to do first?”
That’s where most teams get it wrong.
They document the system.
But users don’t care about the system.
They care about what they’re trying to achieve.
The Problem
The documentation was structured like this:
• Features first
• Endpoints first
• Technical details first
But what users needed was:
• A starting point
• A clear path
• A quick win
So instead of moving forward…
They got stuck thinking.
What I Changed
I focused on one goal:
👉 Make users succeed fast
Here’s what I did:
• Reorganized everything around real use cases
• Created a simple “start here” path
• Reduced unnecessary explanations
• Added clearer, step-by-step examples
• Highlighted what actually matters first
No redesign.
No new features.
Just clarity.
The Result
After the changes:
• Users got started faster
• Fewer repetitive questions came in
• Onboarding felt smoother
• The product felt easier to use
Same product.
Different experience.
What This Taught Me
Most teams think:
“If users are confused, we need more content.”
But that’s not it.
👉 You need better structure, not more information.
A Quick Reality Check
If your product:
• Works, but users still struggle
• Has docs, but people keep asking questions
• Feels powerful, but hard to navigate
Then the issue isn’t capability.
It’s clarity.
Final Thought
You don’t fix confusion by adding more.
You fix it by making things easier to follow.
If you’re building a product, API, or internal tool and users keep getting stuck…
That’s exactly what I help solve.
I turn “it works” into “it makes sense.”