
Creating Personality-Driven Design Experiences
Boagworld: UX, Design Leadership, Marketing & Conversion Optimization
Elevating UX in Cybersecurity Applications
This chapter explores the significance of branding and user engagement in cybersecurity applications, emphasizing the often overlooked artistry in UI/UX design. It examines the unique challenges faced when designing interfaces for critical infrastructures and the evolving responsibilities of designers in this field.
Creating Personality-Driven Design Experiences
In this weekโs episode of the Boagworld Show, weโre joined by none other than Andy โThe Pioneerโ Clarke. We dig deep into the role of aesthetics in UX, explore how AI can conduct user interviews, and debate how to approach pricing conversations with clients. Alongside our usual banter, youโll find insights into why design needs personality and how creative direction can add real value, whether youโre designing marketing sites or B2B dashboards.
We also introduce a new AI-powered user research tool, share some standout reading recommendations, and end with the usual Marcus groaner (youโve been warned).
App of the Week: Whyser
This week we took a look at Whyser, an AI tool designed to conduct user interviews on your behalf. You simply set up your interview goals and questions, and the AI takes care of the rest; scheduling, conducting, and even analyzing interviews.
What impressed us most was how well the AI adapted its questions based on our answers. It felt remarkably natural and even asked follow-up questions relevant to what weโd said earlier. Thatโs a big deal for those of us who struggle to find time to do interviews at scale.
Whyser isnโt without its drawbacks; it does put a layer between you and your users, which can dilute the empathy you build through real human conversation. But if time or access is limited, this could be a game changer. Especially helpful for teams that rarely get to talk to users directly.
Topic of the Week: Why Aesthetics Still Matter in UX
We hear it all the time: โDesign is about solving problems.โ Thatโs true, but itโs not the whole picture. In this episode, we explore the undervalued role of aesthetics in UX and why visual design, art direction, and brand personality still matter.
From Usable to Memorable
We kicked off with a discussion about how too many websites today feel like โcolored-in wireframes.โ Theyโre functional but lack soul. The shift toward product-thinking has stripped personality from digital experiences. As Andy put it, โEverything looks like Bootstrap.โ
Yet, personality plays a critical role in how users connect with your brand. Whether itโs a SaaS dashboard or a marketing homepage, how a product feels impacts engagement, trust, and even long-term retention. People stick around when something makes them feel somethingโeven if they canโt quite explain why.
The Cognitive Load Link
Thereโs a practical side to aesthetics too. Good design improves usability not just through layout but also by boosting mood. A more pleasant experience reduces cognitive load, making interfaces feel easier to use.
That means aesthetics arenโt just about making things pretty; theyโre a lever for user performance and satisfaction. Itโs not fluff; itโs function wrapped in emotion.
Art Direction in Unlikely Places
Andy gave a great example from his time working on a cybersecurity app. Hardly a glamorous field, yet he found space to inject moments of brand personality through microinteractions, onboarding flows, and visual consistency. Even in utilitarian tools, design can reflect a brandโs values and improve the user experience.
As he put it: โYou donโt need to delight, but you do need to differentiate.โ
Reframing Creativity
The problem, we all agreed, starts in education. Many young designers are trained to focus on flows, not feelings. They're brilliant at getting users from A to B but havenโt been taught how to make that journey enjoyable or memorable.
Andy argued that curiosity is the missing ingredient. Design isnโt just about function, itโs about communication. And communication thrives on references, storytelling, and creativity. He showed us how keeping a library of visual influences, whether itโs old magazine layouts, album covers, or supermarket packaging, can help inject new life into projects.
Selling the Value of Aesthetic Thinking
Websites are easy to build these days. What clients are really paying for is the ability to tell their story well. Thatโs where we, as designers, add value.
Andyโs take? Spend 95% of your budget on creativity and 5% on implementation. Tools like Squarespace can handle the build, what matters is how it looks, feels, and communicates. Thatโs where your edge lies.
And when clients say, โBut we already have a brand,โ the job becomes about interpreting that brand, stretching it into a full visual language, not just slapping a logo onto a template.
So if youโve felt the creative spark dimming lately, maybe itโs time to step away from your Figma files and pick up an old design annual, flick through a vintage magazine, or just take a walk with curiosity as your guide.
Read of the Week
This week we didnโt highlight specific articles, so no recommended reading to share. That said, the conversation itself was rich with references; from Blue Note album covers to 'Smash Hits' magazine layoutsโand might inspire you to go digging through your own design bookshelf.
Listener Question of the Week
We didnโt have a listener question either, but the discussion turned to one thatโs always on designersโ minds: How do I handle client feedback without compromising the design?
Andyโs advice was simple but brilliant: only give clients choices over things they canโt mess up. Stakeholders will always want to contribute; so let them. But steer them toward harmless decisions. Let them choose between two acceptable color variations or headline treatments, but donโt give them free rein over critical layout or concept work unless you're okay with every option on the table.
Another smart tip: give clients creative choices using metaphors. Instead of asking โDo you want this to feel formal or informal?โ ask โIf your brand were a movie or celebrity, who would it be?โ Itโs a great way to pull out emotional nuance without falling into clichรฉs like โtrustworthyโ and โprofessionalโ (which, letโs face it, everyone says).
And finally, validate your design decisions with user testing. Donโt let testing dictate the design, but do use it to confirm youโre on the right track. That way, you move from subjective opinions to informed decisions and you keep the project moving forward.
Marcus's Joke
And to close the show, hereโs Marcusโs joke (we apologize in advance):
Scientists have found that cows produce more milk when the farmer talks to them.
Apparently, itโs a case of in one ear and out the udder.
Weโll leave you to groan in peace.
Thanks for listening, or reading, if youโre one of our show notes faithful. If you enjoyed Andyโs insights, be sure to check out his work over at Stuff & Nonsense. Until next time!


