We're a conversion optimization consultancy (see https://2xcd.com/) where we specialize in:
- UX analysis and usage audits,
- CRO focused redesigns, and
- fully managed A/B testing campaigns
Our services are best suited for growth stage companies with at least $300k ARR and 20k monthly visitors.
We take pride in creating designs that pay for themselves. Our biggest win thus far was helping one of our clients double their MRR to $400k/month through split tests, landing page optimizations, and improving their return on ad spend in about 8 weeks.
We've helped companies big and small--SaaS companies with millions of users, venture-backed companies, 500 Startup alums, "traditional" online businesses. Chances are, we can help you reach your business goals too.
I have a background in usability research and UX design (12+ years) and my partner is a generalist that leads growth at our SaaS company. We're both technical (both: front-end, plus, I work with Rails + Angular) and are current with growth practices. We run the largest growth hacker's meet up in our city and meet with local experts regularly.
If you're interested in working together, I'm at john at 2xcd.com.
Hi, I'm John, a conversion-focused UX designer from Vancouver, Canada.
I run a conversion optimization consultancy (https://2xcd.com/) where I help my clients get higher conversions on key metrics by applying design best practices and conducting online experiments.
Past results include:
- Increased sign ups for a well known SaaS product (15M+ users) by over 28% (~1500/sign ups per week, millions of new revenue annualized)
- Increased sign ups for my own SaaS product by 2.5x from a single CTA split test (from 9.2% to 23.3% - xxx/month)
- Increased revenue for a MicroSaaS / side project by 7.5x (by redesigning a 4-stage funnel with strong conversion lifts at each stage, $2500MRR)
I take pride in creating designs that pay for themselves, so if your project is not optimized and you can invest $xxxx for 2-10x returns, get in touch.
I've also been coding for 10+ years and can help your project with front-end development (HTML, CSS /SASS, JS/jQuery). I've worked with Rails, Angular, Ember and PHP and can navigate my way around most frameworks. If you have a side project, e-commerce site or SaaS that needs an expert to 1) clean up your UI, 2) improve the user experience, or 3) clarify your marketing messages, I'm your guy.
I'm a full stack developer (4+ years) with a background in UX/UI design (10+ years). I excel at helping others make great product decisions, especially in the early, exploratory phase.
I've worked in roles as a user researcher, lead designer, product lead, and in conversion optimization and retention. I have SaaS product management experiences, trained jr. developers (as head instructor at a leading coding bootcamp) and have shipped multiple MVPs.
I'm currently working on my startup https://dayboard.co/, and am looking to take on a project to help fund development. I'm particularly interested in building software MVPs.
Availability: I'm currently wrapping up another contract and will be available starting mid-May.
I'm a full stack developer (4+ years) with a background in UX/UI design (10+ years). I excel at helping others make great product decisions, especially in the early, exploratory phase.
I've worked in roles as a user researcher, lead designer, product lead, and in conversion optimization and retention. I have SaaS product management experiences, trained jr. developers (as head instructor at a leading coding bootcamp) and have shipped multiple MVPs.
I'm currently working on my startup https://dayboard.co/, and am looking to take on a project to help fund development. I'm particularly interested in building software MVPs and am looking to explore React / React Native for my next project (but am open to other options).
I'm a full stack developer (4+ years) and have a background in UX/UI design (10+ years). I've worked for roles as a user researcher, lead designer, and conversion optimization and retention. I have product management experience, trained jr. developers (as a lead instructor at bootcamp) and have shipped multiple MVPs.
I'm currently working on my startup https://dayboard.co/, and am looking to take on a project to help fund development. I'm particularly interested in building software MVPs and am looking to explore React and React Native for my next project (but am open to other options).
There's nothing wrong with reading and absorbing new knowledge. It's doing it before you've done your important work. When you're done, you can (and should) indulge in activities you find relaxing and beneficial. Helps us stay informed and prevent burn out in the long run.
It does other things like helping you plan daily, figure out what's worth doing or not, help you cut down switching costs (i.e. when you do end up getting distracted), single handle your tasks, etc - but that's icing on the cake.
It's a different approach to extensions that block distracting sites, which while useful, I think misses the point. (The point is to focus on what you should be doing, not just block what you shouldn't be doing. Plus, there are times I think it's appropriate to read HN, Reddit, FB, Twitter, Wikipedia etc.)
Also, anecdotally, I can tell you a lot of my users fall in the same pattern where they're most productive on Mondays but get progressively less productive throughout the week. You're definitely not alone. I haven't dug into the data and I have a relatively small sample but if you dig around, I'm sure there are blog posts that talks about this already.
I might change my mind on this but I'm generally erring on the side of staying away from integrations.
At first, it sounds very convenient (everything's right there!) but over time, I believe it's going to do more harm than good.
There's a few reasons for that but the main reasons are:
- an issue / task created on another app might not fit within the scope of a day
- integrating tasks across services ultimately leads to having too many tasks in plain view.
Bottom line is this: seeing all your to dos would encourage you to "organize your todos" or "work on things you didn't intend to" -- which defeats the purpose of this app. There are plenty of other tools that organizes your thoughts / brain dumps / team communications pretty well and this isn't going to be one of them.
I'm not sure what you mean by your second point but remember, this list is really about what "you intend to work on today". Our priorities can and often do change throughout the day - but this might also show us the discrepancy between "what we set out to do" vs "what we actually did". Often times, we get pulled into doing things that are urgent but unimportant which 1) puts us into a fire-fighting mode and 2) may leave us feeling unaccomplished at the end of the day because "we were busy all day, but we feel like we got anything done". It's the same feeling we get when we spend all day in email. We've all been there before.
I mentioned this in another comment but generally, I'm against it too much "organizing and planning" inside Dayboard -- which 1) is what most task management / to do lists already offer (and isn't necessarily doing a bad job at) and 2) isn't the actual work that people should be doing.
That said: I do personally keep another to do list outside of Dayboard (I use Asana) where I do brain dumps of all the things I'd like/need to do. It might seem counterintuitive to use a separate service but Dayboard acts as a reminder when I get distracted or start doing things that I shouldn't be, and by keeping my "other to dos" in another service, it actually frees my mind from thinking about what else I could be doing. Out of sight, out of mind, right?
Let me know if that makes any sense -- I'd love to hear your thoughts!
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Conversion Rate Optimization for E-commerce and SaaS Companies
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We're a conversion optimization consultancy (see https://2xcd.com/) where we specialize in:
- UX analysis and usage audits,
- CRO focused redesigns, and
- fully managed A/B testing campaigns
Our services are best suited for growth stage companies with at least $300k ARR and 20k monthly visitors.
We take pride in creating designs that pay for themselves. Our biggest win thus far was helping one of our clients double their MRR to $400k/month through split tests, landing page optimizations, and improving their return on ad spend in about 8 weeks.
We've helped companies big and small--SaaS companies with millions of users, venture-backed companies, 500 Startup alums, "traditional" online businesses. Chances are, we can help you reach your business goals too.
I have a background in usability research and UX design (12+ years) and my partner is a generalist that leads growth at our SaaS company. We're both technical (both: front-end, plus, I work with Rails + Angular) and are current with growth practices. We run the largest growth hacker's meet up in our city and meet with local experts regularly.
If you're interested in working together, I'm at john at 2xcd.com.
Looking forward to chatting!