Who’s Responsible for UX?

In Part One, we examined why UX matters – specifically, how it impacts conversions, trust, and retention. In Part Two, we explored the hidden costs of poor UX and the silent losses that accompany it. Part three outlined what good UX looks like in practice: clarity, consistency and ease of use.

Now comes a key question: Who is responsible for creating that experience?

When people hear “user experience,” they often picture a design team choosing colours, fonts and layouts. But UX goes far beyond design. It’s about how your website works, from the moment someone lands on it to the moment they complete a task.

And making that experience smooth, clear and compelling? That is not one person’s job. It is everyone’s.

UX is a team sport

Good UX is the result of several roles working together, whether you are a two-person team or collaborating with an external agency.

Here is how different roles contribute to UX:

Business owners and stakeholders

Set goals, define priorities, and make decisions that positively impact user flows.

Marketers

Understand customer needs, analyse behaviour and shape the journey toward conversion.

Designers

Designers do more than create intuitive, accessible interfaces. They map user journeys, define structure and ensure that the experience meets real needs.

Copywriters

Write user-facing text – including headlines, buttons, and forms – that is clear, helpful, and aligned with the tone.

Developers

Build and refine the site or application to perform well across devices and load quickly.

Customer support and sales

Hear user pain points first-hand: what is confusing, what is working and what is missing.

You do not need all these roles in-house, but you do need to ensure the user remains in focus throughout the entire process.

Why it matters

When UX is treated like a bolt-on design fix at the end, it usually falls short. It leads to confusing menus, unclear actions and missed opportunities.

But when everyone on the team understands the value of UX, from content and structure to visuals and performance, your site becomes more straightforward to use and more effective.

A shared responsibility means better results

You do not have to be a designer to improve UX. You just need to ask the right questions:

  • Can our users find what they are looking for in under 10 seconds?

  • Are we writing and building this for ourselves, or for the person we want to attract?

  • What happens after someone clicks this button?

When everyone in the business considers these questions, you get better answers and better results.

Ready to improve your team’s impact on UX?

Discuss with us how we help teams collaborate more effectively to develop websites that meet genuine user needs.

Hör gärna av dig!

Mitt namn är Olivia och jag svarar gärna på frågor om hur vi kan hjälpa ditt företag. Kontakta mig gärna för mer information eller om du önskar ett kostnadsförslag.

    Jag accepterar integritetspolicyn