Author: Oleksandr H.

  • How to adopt your product to a new market

    How to adopt your product to a new market

    Case study with key metrics explanation 

    Why would the top 1 product seek changes?   

    Max and Larry, our clients in the dividend tracking niche, came to us with a unique challenge. 

    Their platform had already secured a top position in the European market, but regional growth had plateaued. Still, the founders had no intention of slowing down. 

    They recognized the shifting landscape: user expectations were evolving, and competitors were actively developing similar tools, ready to lure users away. Any delay in innovation or product development could mean losing their edge. 

    With obviously high customer demand and a strong will to expand the product, the team began exploring new opportunities, with North America as the next possible frontier. 

    Once successful model will not always be good.

    Max and Larry’s main request was to redesign their platform for the North American market.  

    Successfull European experience wasn’t applicable to this new, competitive region. 

    We began the redesign process with a deep analysis of their current website and feature set.  

    During Heuristic Evaluation we paid attention to: 

    • Navigation 
    • Interface consistency 
    • Key features accessibility and user action processing 

    Even without a complete rebuild, we identified clear opportunities to improve user experience and attract more local users. 

    Some of our recommendations included: 

    • Restructuring tables and lists for quicker, more intuitive content access 
    • Adding fast access to filtering and sorting tools 
    • Organizing all key features into a single, user-friendly control panel 
    • Creating a design system for components to ensure a consistent look and feel 
    • Pinning account status and adding a one-click subscription renewal button to improve conversion 

    We distilled our UX review into a focused set of actionable improvements, fast to implement and directly aligned with their expansion goals: 

    Competitors – are a shortcut to win the market.

    From our experience, we advise against relying on founders’ personal impressions or forum reviews of niche products. Use objective tools that highlight real competitors with active user bases, not just well-known names with random engagement and features. 

    Avoid guessing what users want. Instead, study live products in your niche—their features are already market-validated and set user expectations. Don’t waste resources on “fancy” features no one actually uses.  

    When entering a new market, it’s especially important to look at proven solutions and align your product with local expectations. 

    In the North American dividend tracking niche, we identified two strong players and analyzed them using these key metrics: 

    • Traffic sources 
    • User engagement levels 
    • Presence of referral programs and social media channels 

    Here is one example of how it works.

    One of the clearest insights from our analysis was the importance of the mobile experience. 

    For both our client and their competitors, at least 50% of traffic comes from mobile devices. Competitors responded by implementing responsive design and launching mobile apps to enhance the user experience. 

    For our client, optimizing the mobile version became a key opportunity to improve their service and attract new users. 

    In the North American market, this feature is non-negotiable. Users expect to track dividends on the go. A poor mobile experience or no mobile option at all will drive away most potential users. 

    Final action plan.

    Combining heuristic evaluation and competitor s’ analysis let us develop a clear action plan to strengthen client’s presence in Europe and expand into North America. 

     
    We defined minimum requirements to test a new market and a full-scale strategy to outperform the competition. 

    Without this kind of research, any redesign is just a waste of time and money. If your contractor is ready to jump in without analyzing the market, you may want to reconsider the value of that partnership. 

    For serious work on your product’s positioning and a competitive redesign – get in touch. 

  • Don’t Build Your Blog on Webflow Until You Read This

    Don’t Build Your Blog on Webflow Until You Read This

    “I’m losing money because of my CMS limitations”

    That’s exactly what Milo,
    one of our clients, told us.

    Milo runs a successful culinary blog with high search rankings and a loyal audience. Over several years, he published 200+ articles on Webflow, managing everything himself—writing, posting, adding illustrations, and engaging with readers.   But as the blog grew, so did its problems.  You can have the best content and high positions in search but still lose the race for user attention.  On one sad morning Milo noticed that it takes around 5-7 seconds to load the blog page. Because of this, readers were quitting, articles were losing rankings, and Milo got a significant drop in user engagement, view and – consequently – money. 

    It was the last straw that made him seek help. By the time he contacted us, Milo got all the problems of the big Webflow project: 

    • Flat article hierarchy – no subcategories or structured navigation. 
    • No search or filters – finding and editing old posts was tedious. 
    • Slow page loads – causing SEO penalties and reader churn. 
    • Organic traffic down 20–30% – Google deprioritized the blog due to performance issues. 

    Webflow’s limitations left no room for fixes – no access to code, caching tweaks, or CDN optimizations.  

    Milo had hit a wall. 

    Our choice was WordPress and that’s why. 

    We audited the existing site – analyzing content structure, URLs, media files, styles, and scripts – to ensure a seamless migration without losing SEO rankings. 

    Milo’s must-haves for the updated blog were:

    • Unlimited posts & categories 
    • Streamlined content management 
    • SEO control 
    • Lightning-fast load speeds 
    Switching to WordPress solved Milo’s issues instantly: 
    • Full control over structure & content 
    • Scalability—no limits on posts or growth 
    • Various integrations 
    • Advanced SEO tools 
    • Faster performance & caching 

    We exported all content via Webflow’s built-in CSV export, built a custom WordPress theme, and mapped URLs for SEO retention. A custom parser imported posts while preserving formatting.  

    We managed to move part of the functionality directly from the old version. The rest we developed from scratch and made: 

    • Optimized styles & scripts for performance 
    • Added search & category filters for easier management 
    • Integrated delayed posting so Milo could schedule content 
    • Added feedback form 
    • Re-build recepies calculators 
    • Updated design 
    Results? +30% traffic in 1 months 

    With customized CMS, new hosting with server-side cashing and sufficient bandwidth we managed to:  

    • Cut load time from 7s to <1s 
    • Add +30% organic traffic in 1 month 
    • 90% of readers now stay for 5–10 min 
    • Let Milo to publish more efficiently 

    Whay all that work was needed and what went wrong? 

    Webflow was great for Milo at first—quick setup, easy UI. But growth exposed its limits, forcing a full rebuild. 

    Choosing the right CMS from day one can save years of hassle.   

    In our next article, we’ll break down who should stick with Webflow vs. who needs WordPress from the start. Stay tuned!