A list of patterns that are important to identify in UX design. Being able to satisfy users and the business could sometimes be tricky, by avoiding these patterns, sometimes chosen unconsciously, you will benefit the user and the business. Remember that not the business or the user should be satisfied alone for UX to work.
Trick questions
While filling in a form you respond to a question that tricks you into giving an answer you didn’t intend. When glanced upon quickly the question appears to ask one thing, but when read carefully it asks another thing entirely.
Sneak into basket
You attempt to purchase something, but somewhere in the purchasing journey the site sneaks an additional item into your basket, often through the use of an opt-out radio button or checkbox on a prior page.
Roach motel
You get into a situation very easily, but then you find it is hard to get out of it (e.g. a premium subscription).
Privacy suckering
You are tricked into publicly sharing more information about yourself than you really intended to. Named after Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg.
Price comparison prevention
The retailer makes it hard for you to compare the price of an item with another item, so you cannot make an informed decision.
Misdirection
The design purposefully focuses your attention on one thing in order to distract your attention from another.
Hidden costs
You get to the last step of the checkout process, only to discover some unexpected charges have appeared, e.g. delivery charges, tax, etc.
Bait and switch
You set out to do one thing, but a different, undesirable thing happens instead.
Confirm shaming
The act of guilting the user into opting into something. The option to decline is worded in such a way as to shame the user into compliance.
Disguised ads
Adverts that are disguised as other kinds of content or navigation, in order to get you to click on them.
Forced continuity
When your free trial with a service comes to an end and your credit card silently starts getting charged without any warning. In some cases this is made even worse by making it difficult to cancel the membership.
Friend spam
The product asks for your email or social media permissions under the pretence it will be used for a desirable outcome (e.g. finding friends), but then spams all your contacts in a message that claims to be from you.