At Baymard, we’ve just released another major expansion to our 2020 Mobile UX research catalog, with the two main highlights being:
This article provides you with a short summary of our latest UX research initiatives.
During 2020 we’ve UX performance benchmarked the mobile websites from 57 of the largest brands across our 250+ mobile UX guidelines, leading to a new “2020 Mobile E-Commerce UX benchmark”.
This provides you with 9,000+ worst- and best-practice mobile UX examples, and 12,300+ mobile UX performance scores from 2020:
During 2020, Baymard’s team of UX researchers has so far uncovered 117 new Mobile UX guidelines, that in-detail document how users behave on mobile devices and websites in 2020, and what mobile UI patterns that are consistently observed to perform the best with end-users.
The new large-scale UX test findings, in particular, revolve around the topics of “Mobile Homepages”, “Mobile Main Navigation”, “Mobile Product Pages”, “Mobile Product Listings & Filtering”; and “Mobile Cart & Checkouts”.
This research, along with our 2019 mobile UX research, is by far the most comprehensive research project we’ve conducted in Baymard’s 10 years of existence.
Over the next couple of months, a smaller selection of these new mobile UX guidelines will be published as free Baymard articles.
Enjoy - the Baymard research team
PS. For those of you who have Baymard Premium research access, all 250+ mobile UX guidelines are already released, with the 9,000+ best-practice examples and 12,300+ performance scores embedded in full.
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Jena RondinelliSeptember 1, 2020
Is there a way to see what the new UX guidelines are w/o having to read through everything that’s already existing on the site?
Christian, co-founder at Baymard InstituteSeptember 2, 2020
Hi Jena, yes there is.
If you use the “Mark As Read” button on each of our research pages you can track you progress and see what research pages you have read, and what you have not (e.g. newly added).. If you use that button then this page https://baymard.com/premium/content-updates will also tell which of the research you have read, which have later been updated with new research insights.
Beyond that the “Changelog” page https://baymard.com/premium/pages/roadmap-and-changelog will give you a complete list of all research changes and additions in reverse chronological order.
LukaOctober 12, 2020
Just discovered your website by “accident” as I’ve seen that Rebecca will host a webinar next week. Great content and can’t wait for the upcoming webinar. Now, back to reading articles and learning…and of course implementing the ideas on my website.