BLOGS
My complete archive. A collection of deep-dives into UI/UX, process, and the business of design.
BLOGS
My complete archive. A collection of deep-dives into UI/UX, process, and the business of design.
BLOGS
My complete archive. A collection of deep-dives into UI/UX, process, and the business of design.


The 5-Second Rule: Why Simplicity Wins in Web Design
You have five seconds.
When a new visitor lands on your website, a timer starts. In those five seconds, they are asking three unconscious questions:
Where am I? (Is this a blog? A store? An agency?)
What can I do here? (Can I buy something? Read articles? Hire someone?)
Why should I care? (What's in it for me? Is this credible?)
If your design can't answer those questions instantly, they'll hit the back button. That's the 5-Second Rule. And in today's crowded digital landscape, it's the difference between a new lead and a bounced user.
The Cost of "More"
The most common request I get from new clients is to add more. More features, more text, more buttons, more "pop." But every element you add to a page divides your user's attention. This is what we call cognitive load—the mental effort required to use a product.
When cognitive load is high, clarity is low. The user is forced to work to find the value. They have to parse through three different calls-to-action, a cluttered navigation bar, and a pop-up, all while trying to find the one thing they came for.
This isn't a design trend; it's just human psychology. A confused mind doesn't buy. A confused mind leaves.
Simplicity Isn't Minimalism, It's Clarity
Let's clear up a common misconception. Simplicity in web design doesn't mean "minimalist," "boring," or "empty."
Simplicity is the ruthless prioritization of information.
A simple design has a crystal-clear visual hierarchy. It uses whitespace to give elements room to breathe. It presents one primary call-to-action (CTA) per section, not five. It guides the user's eye exactly where it needs to go.
The goal isn't to remove everything; it's to remove everything that's in the way. It's about decluttering the path from "new visitor" to "satisfied customer."
How We Win in 5 Seconds
So, how do we pass the 5-second test?
We start with strategy, not decoration. Before I design a single pixel, I work to define the one thing we want the user to do on that page. We craft a headline that speaks directly to their problem. We choose an image that evokes the right emotion. We make the primary CTA button impossible to miss.
Simplicity is the ultimate sign of a confident brand. It shows you know your value proposition so well that you don't need to shout it with 10 different flashing banners. You can state it clearly, once.
In web design, what you choose to leave out is just as important as what you put in.
19/05/2025


The 5-Second Rule: Why Simplicity Wins in Web Design
You have five seconds.
When a new visitor lands on your website, a timer starts. In those five seconds, they are asking three unconscious questions:
Where am I? (Is this a blog? A store? An agency?)
What can I do here? (Can I buy something? Read articles? Hire someone?)
Why should I care? (What's in it for me? Is this credible?)
If your design can't answer those questions instantly, they'll hit the back button. That's the 5-Second Rule. And in today's crowded digital landscape, it's the difference between a new lead and a bounced user.
The Cost of "More"
The most common request I get from new clients is to add more. More features, more text, more buttons, more "pop." But every element you add to a page divides your user's attention. This is what we call cognitive load—the mental effort required to use a product.
When cognitive load is high, clarity is low. The user is forced to work to find the value. They have to parse through three different calls-to-action, a cluttered navigation bar, and a pop-up, all while trying to find the one thing they came for.
This isn't a design trend; it's just human psychology. A confused mind doesn't buy. A confused mind leaves.
Simplicity Isn't Minimalism, It's Clarity
Let's clear up a common misconception. Simplicity in web design doesn't mean "minimalist," "boring," or "empty."
Simplicity is the ruthless prioritization of information.
A simple design has a crystal-clear visual hierarchy. It uses whitespace to give elements room to breathe. It presents one primary call-to-action (CTA) per section, not five. It guides the user's eye exactly where it needs to go.
The goal isn't to remove everything; it's to remove everything that's in the way. It's about decluttering the path from "new visitor" to "satisfied customer."
How We Win in 5 Seconds
So, how do we pass the 5-second test?
We start with strategy, not decoration. Before I design a single pixel, I work to define the one thing we want the user to do on that page. We craft a headline that speaks directly to their problem. We choose an image that evokes the right emotion. We make the primary CTA button impossible to miss.
Simplicity is the ultimate sign of a confident brand. It shows you know your value proposition so well that you don't need to shout it with 10 different flashing banners. You can state it clearly, once.
In web design, what you choose to leave out is just as important as what you put in.
19/05/2025


The 5-Second Rule: Why Simplicity Wins in Web Design
You have five seconds.
When a new visitor lands on your website, a timer starts. In those five seconds, they are asking three unconscious questions:
Where am I? (Is this a blog? A store? An agency?)
What can I do here? (Can I buy something? Read articles? Hire someone?)
Why should I care? (What's in it for me? Is this credible?)
If your design can't answer those questions instantly, they'll hit the back button. That's the 5-Second Rule. And in today's crowded digital landscape, it's the difference between a new lead and a bounced user.
The Cost of "More"
The most common request I get from new clients is to add more. More features, more text, more buttons, more "pop." But every element you add to a page divides your user's attention. This is what we call cognitive load—the mental effort required to use a product.
When cognitive load is high, clarity is low. The user is forced to work to find the value. They have to parse through three different calls-to-action, a cluttered navigation bar, and a pop-up, all while trying to find the one thing they came for.
This isn't a design trend; it's just human psychology. A confused mind doesn't buy. A confused mind leaves.
Simplicity Isn't Minimalism, It's Clarity
Let's clear up a common misconception. Simplicity in web design doesn't mean "minimalist," "boring," or "empty."
Simplicity is the ruthless prioritization of information.
A simple design has a crystal-clear visual hierarchy. It uses whitespace to give elements room to breathe. It presents one primary call-to-action (CTA) per section, not five. It guides the user's eye exactly where it needs to go.
The goal isn't to remove everything; it's to remove everything that's in the way. It's about decluttering the path from "new visitor" to "satisfied customer."
How We Win in 5 Seconds
So, how do we pass the 5-second test?
We start with strategy, not decoration. Before I design a single pixel, I work to define the one thing we want the user to do on that page. We craft a headline that speaks directly to their problem. We choose an image that evokes the right emotion. We make the primary CTA button impossible to miss.
Simplicity is the ultimate sign of a confident brand. It shows you know your value proposition so well that you don't need to shout it with 10 different flashing banners. You can state it clearly, once.
In web design, what you choose to leave out is just as important as what you put in.
19/05/2025


The 5-Second Rule: Why Simplicity Wins in Web Design
You have five seconds.
When a new visitor lands on your website, a timer starts. In those five seconds, they are asking three unconscious questions:
Where am I? (Is this a blog? A store? An agency?)
What can I do here? (Can I buy something? Read articles? Hire someone?)
Why should I care? (What's in it for me? Is this credible?)
If your design can't answer those questions instantly, they'll hit the back button. That's the 5-Second Rule. And in today's crowded digital landscape, it's the difference between a new lead and a bounced user.
The Cost of "More"
The most common request I get from new clients is to add more. More features, more text, more buttons, more "pop." But every element you add to a page divides your user's attention. This is what we call cognitive load—the mental effort required to use a product.
When cognitive load is high, clarity is low. The user is forced to work to find the value. They have to parse through three different calls-to-action, a cluttered navigation bar, and a pop-up, all while trying to find the one thing they came for.
This isn't a design trend; it's just human psychology. A confused mind doesn't buy. A confused mind leaves.
Simplicity Isn't Minimalism, It's Clarity
Let's clear up a common misconception. Simplicity in web design doesn't mean "minimalist," "boring," or "empty."
Simplicity is the ruthless prioritization of information.
A simple design has a crystal-clear visual hierarchy. It uses whitespace to give elements room to breathe. It presents one primary call-to-action (CTA) per section, not five. It guides the user's eye exactly where it needs to go.
The goal isn't to remove everything; it's to remove everything that's in the way. It's about decluttering the path from "new visitor" to "satisfied customer."
How We Win in 5 Seconds
So, how do we pass the 5-second test?
We start with strategy, not decoration. Before I design a single pixel, I work to define the one thing we want the user to do on that page. We craft a headline that speaks directly to their problem. We choose an image that evokes the right emotion. We make the primary CTA button impossible to miss.
Simplicity is the ultimate sign of a confident brand. It shows you know your value proposition so well that you don't need to shout it with 10 different flashing banners. You can state it clearly, once.
In web design, what you choose to leave out is just as important as what you put in.
19/05/2025


Beyond Pretty: How Your Site's Design Is Secretly Costing You Sales
We all love a beautiful website. But "pretty" doesn't pay the bills.
I've seen countless businesses invest tens of thousands of dollars into a redesign, only to see their conversion rates stay flat—or even worse, plummet. Why? Because they bought a pretty "skin," not a functional "machine."
A website is not an art gallery. It's a business tool. It's your 24/7 salesperson, your primary lead generator, and your most important brand ambassador. If its design is built on aesthetics alone, it's silently failing at its job.
Here are the silent killers of conversion that I see every day.
1. Deadly Friction Points
Friction is any part of the user's journey that causes hesitation, confusion, or frustration.
Vague CTAs: A button that says "Learn More" when it should say "Get Your Free Quote."
Confusing Navigation: A user shouldn't have to think, "Where would they hide the pricing page?"
Excessive Form Fields: Do you really need their phone number, company size, and fax number just for a newsletter signup? Every extra field is a reason to abandon the form.
2. Crippling Cognitive Load
As I discussed in my "5-Second Rule" post, cognitive load is the mental effort a user has to expend.
Too Many Choices (Hick's Law): A pricing page with 5 different tiers and 20 different features is paralyzing. The user can't decide, so they don't.
Conflicting Messages: A homepage that promises "Simplicity" but is visually cluttered and hard to read.
Poor Typography: Text that is too small, too light, or has too little contrast is work to read. Users don't read; they scan. If scanning is difficult, the message is lost.
3. Broken Trust & Perceived Value
Your site's design is a subconscious signal of your company's professionalism.
A "Pretty" but Non-Responsive Site: It looks great on a 27-inch monitor, but on a mobile phone, the buttons are microscopic, and the text overlaps. Over 50% of web traffic is mobile. You just lost half your audience.
Inconsistent Branding: Different button styles, colors, and fonts on every page. This feels cheap and disjointed, like a "Frankenstein" site. It erodes trust.
A design that converts isn't just "pretty." It's intentional. It's a well-oiled machine where every pixel has a purpose. That purpose is to guide the user to their goal (and your business goal) with the least amount of friction possible.
Stop asking, "How can we make this 'pop'?" Start asking, "How can we make this easier?"
19/05/2025


Beyond Pretty: How Your Site's Design Is Secretly Costing You Sales
We all love a beautiful website. But "pretty" doesn't pay the bills.
I've seen countless businesses invest tens of thousands of dollars into a redesign, only to see their conversion rates stay flat—or even worse, plummet. Why? Because they bought a pretty "skin," not a functional "machine."
A website is not an art gallery. It's a business tool. It's your 24/7 salesperson, your primary lead generator, and your most important brand ambassador. If its design is built on aesthetics alone, it's silently failing at its job.
Here are the silent killers of conversion that I see every day.
1. Deadly Friction Points
Friction is any part of the user's journey that causes hesitation, confusion, or frustration.
Vague CTAs: A button that says "Learn More" when it should say "Get Your Free Quote."
Confusing Navigation: A user shouldn't have to think, "Where would they hide the pricing page?"
Excessive Form Fields: Do you really need their phone number, company size, and fax number just for a newsletter signup? Every extra field is a reason to abandon the form.
2. Crippling Cognitive Load
As I discussed in my "5-Second Rule" post, cognitive load is the mental effort a user has to expend.
Too Many Choices (Hick's Law): A pricing page with 5 different tiers and 20 different features is paralyzing. The user can't decide, so they don't.
Conflicting Messages: A homepage that promises "Simplicity" but is visually cluttered and hard to read.
Poor Typography: Text that is too small, too light, or has too little contrast is work to read. Users don't read; they scan. If scanning is difficult, the message is lost.
3. Broken Trust & Perceived Value
Your site's design is a subconscious signal of your company's professionalism.
A "Pretty" but Non-Responsive Site: It looks great on a 27-inch monitor, but on a mobile phone, the buttons are microscopic, and the text overlaps. Over 50% of web traffic is mobile. You just lost half your audience.
Inconsistent Branding: Different button styles, colors, and fonts on every page. This feels cheap and disjointed, like a "Frankenstein" site. It erodes trust.
A design that converts isn't just "pretty." It's intentional. It's a well-oiled machine where every pixel has a purpose. That purpose is to guide the user to their goal (and your business goal) with the least amount of friction possible.
Stop asking, "How can we make this 'pop'?" Start asking, "How can we make this easier?"
19/05/2025


Beyond Pretty: How Your Site's Design Is Secretly Costing You Sales
We all love a beautiful website. But "pretty" doesn't pay the bills.
I've seen countless businesses invest tens of thousands of dollars into a redesign, only to see their conversion rates stay flat—or even worse, plummet. Why? Because they bought a pretty "skin," not a functional "machine."
A website is not an art gallery. It's a business tool. It's your 24/7 salesperson, your primary lead generator, and your most important brand ambassador. If its design is built on aesthetics alone, it's silently failing at its job.
Here are the silent killers of conversion that I see every day.
1. Deadly Friction Points
Friction is any part of the user's journey that causes hesitation, confusion, or frustration.
Vague CTAs: A button that says "Learn More" when it should say "Get Your Free Quote."
Confusing Navigation: A user shouldn't have to think, "Where would they hide the pricing page?"
Excessive Form Fields: Do you really need their phone number, company size, and fax number just for a newsletter signup? Every extra field is a reason to abandon the form.
2. Crippling Cognitive Load
As I discussed in my "5-Second Rule" post, cognitive load is the mental effort a user has to expend.
Too Many Choices (Hick's Law): A pricing page with 5 different tiers and 20 different features is paralyzing. The user can't decide, so they don't.
Conflicting Messages: A homepage that promises "Simplicity" but is visually cluttered and hard to read.
Poor Typography: Text that is too small, too light, or has too little contrast is work to read. Users don't read; they scan. If scanning is difficult, the message is lost.
3. Broken Trust & Perceived Value
Your site's design is a subconscious signal of your company's professionalism.
A "Pretty" but Non-Responsive Site: It looks great on a 27-inch monitor, but on a mobile phone, the buttons are microscopic, and the text overlaps. Over 50% of web traffic is mobile. You just lost half your audience.
Inconsistent Branding: Different button styles, colors, and fonts on every page. This feels cheap and disjointed, like a "Frankenstein" site. It erodes trust.
A design that converts isn't just "pretty." It's intentional. It's a well-oiled machine where every pixel has a purpose. That purpose is to guide the user to their goal (and your business goal) with the least amount of friction possible.
Stop asking, "How can we make this 'pop'?" Start asking, "How can we make this easier?"
19/05/2025


Beyond Pretty: How Your Site's Design Is Secretly Costing You Sales
We all love a beautiful website. But "pretty" doesn't pay the bills.
I've seen countless businesses invest tens of thousands of dollars into a redesign, only to see their conversion rates stay flat—or even worse, plummet. Why? Because they bought a pretty "skin," not a functional "machine."
A website is not an art gallery. It's a business tool. It's your 24/7 salesperson, your primary lead generator, and your most important brand ambassador. If its design is built on aesthetics alone, it's silently failing at its job.
Here are the silent killers of conversion that I see every day.
1. Deadly Friction Points
Friction is any part of the user's journey that causes hesitation, confusion, or frustration.
Vague CTAs: A button that says "Learn More" when it should say "Get Your Free Quote."
Confusing Navigation: A user shouldn't have to think, "Where would they hide the pricing page?"
Excessive Form Fields: Do you really need their phone number, company size, and fax number just for a newsletter signup? Every extra field is a reason to abandon the form.
2. Crippling Cognitive Load
As I discussed in my "5-Second Rule" post, cognitive load is the mental effort a user has to expend.
Too Many Choices (Hick's Law): A pricing page with 5 different tiers and 20 different features is paralyzing. The user can't decide, so they don't.
Conflicting Messages: A homepage that promises "Simplicity" but is visually cluttered and hard to read.
Poor Typography: Text that is too small, too light, or has too little contrast is work to read. Users don't read; they scan. If scanning is difficult, the message is lost.
3. Broken Trust & Perceived Value
Your site's design is a subconscious signal of your company's professionalism.
A "Pretty" but Non-Responsive Site: It looks great on a 27-inch monitor, but on a mobile phone, the buttons are microscopic, and the text overlaps. Over 50% of web traffic is mobile. You just lost half your audience.
Inconsistent Branding: Different button styles, colors, and fonts on every page. This feels cheap and disjointed, like a "Frankenstein" site. It erodes trust.
A design that converts isn't just "pretty." It's intentional. It's a well-oiled machine where every pixel has a purpose. That purpose is to guide the user to their goal (and your business goal) with the least amount of friction possible.
Stop asking, "How can we make this 'pop'?" Start asking, "How can we make this easier?"
19/05/2025


Why I'm Using Framer for 90% of My Client Sites in 2026
For years, the professional web design debate has been a predictable one: the customization of Webflow versus the ubiquity of WordPress. We all got comfortable in our chosen tools. Then, Framer came along and changed the entire game.
As of 2026, I am building roughly 90% of my client websites in Framer. And it's not just a personal preference—it's a strategic decision that delivers better, faster, and more powerful results for my clients.
Here’s why.
1. The Death of the "Handoff"
The single biggest bottleneck in web design has always been the "handoff." Designers create a perfect, pixel-rich prototype in Figma. Then, they "hand it off" to a developer, who spends weeks trying to translate that vision into code.
It never comes out the same. Interactions get lost. Spacing is "a little off." The "feel" is gone.
Framer eliminates this. It's a design tool and a production-ready website builder in one. The prototype I design is the final, live website. The buttery-smooth animations, the interactive components, the pixel-perfect layouts—what you see is exactly what you get. This cuts development time from weeks to days and ensures 100% fidelity to the design.
2. Blazing Fast by Default
We all know that site speed is critical. It's a core factor for Google's SEO rankings and for user retention. A 2-second delay in page load can send bounce rates through the roof.
Framer sites are, by default, incredibly fast. The platform is built from the ground up on modern tech (React) and handles all the complex optimization—image compression, CDN, code minification—automatically. I don't have to wrestle with a mountain of clunky WordPress plugins just to get a good PageSpeed score. My clients get a high-performance site out of the box.
3. True Interaction & Animation Power
This is where Framer truly leaves the competition behind. Other builders can handle a simple "fade-in-on-scroll." Framer handles advanced, dynamic interactions with ease.
Want that "sticky-scroll" storytelling section? That "ID card" hero that animates? That complex, gesture-based mobile menu? In Framer, these are not just possible; they are intuitive to build. It allows me to create the "Apple-level" experiences that clients crave, without the "Apple-level" budget for a team of 10 developers.
For me, the choice is clear. Using Framer means I can spend less time managing plugins and fighting with code, and more time on what actually matters: designing a strategic, beautiful, and effective experience for your users. It's the future of the web, and it's how I'm delivering a tangible advantage to my clients today.
19/05/2025


Why I'm Using Framer for 90% of My Client Sites in 2026
For years, the professional web design debate has been a predictable one: the customization of Webflow versus the ubiquity of WordPress. We all got comfortable in our chosen tools. Then, Framer came along and changed the entire game.
As of 2026, I am building roughly 90% of my client websites in Framer. And it's not just a personal preference—it's a strategic decision that delivers better, faster, and more powerful results for my clients.
Here’s why.
1. The Death of the "Handoff"
The single biggest bottleneck in web design has always been the "handoff." Designers create a perfect, pixel-rich prototype in Figma. Then, they "hand it off" to a developer, who spends weeks trying to translate that vision into code.
It never comes out the same. Interactions get lost. Spacing is "a little off." The "feel" is gone.
Framer eliminates this. It's a design tool and a production-ready website builder in one. The prototype I design is the final, live website. The buttery-smooth animations, the interactive components, the pixel-perfect layouts—what you see is exactly what you get. This cuts development time from weeks to days and ensures 100% fidelity to the design.
2. Blazing Fast by Default
We all know that site speed is critical. It's a core factor for Google's SEO rankings and for user retention. A 2-second delay in page load can send bounce rates through the roof.
Framer sites are, by default, incredibly fast. The platform is built from the ground up on modern tech (React) and handles all the complex optimization—image compression, CDN, code minification—automatically. I don't have to wrestle with a mountain of clunky WordPress plugins just to get a good PageSpeed score. My clients get a high-performance site out of the box.
3. True Interaction & Animation Power
This is where Framer truly leaves the competition behind. Other builders can handle a simple "fade-in-on-scroll." Framer handles advanced, dynamic interactions with ease.
Want that "sticky-scroll" storytelling section? That "ID card" hero that animates? That complex, gesture-based mobile menu? In Framer, these are not just possible; they are intuitive to build. It allows me to create the "Apple-level" experiences that clients crave, without the "Apple-level" budget for a team of 10 developers.
For me, the choice is clear. Using Framer means I can spend less time managing plugins and fighting with code, and more time on what actually matters: designing a strategic, beautiful, and effective experience for your users. It's the future of the web, and it's how I'm delivering a tangible advantage to my clients today.
19/05/2025


Why I'm Using Framer for 90% of My Client Sites in 2026
For years, the professional web design debate has been a predictable one: the customization of Webflow versus the ubiquity of WordPress. We all got comfortable in our chosen tools. Then, Framer came along and changed the entire game.
As of 2026, I am building roughly 90% of my client websites in Framer. And it's not just a personal preference—it's a strategic decision that delivers better, faster, and more powerful results for my clients.
Here’s why.
1. The Death of the "Handoff"
The single biggest bottleneck in web design has always been the "handoff." Designers create a perfect, pixel-rich prototype in Figma. Then, they "hand it off" to a developer, who spends weeks trying to translate that vision into code.
It never comes out the same. Interactions get lost. Spacing is "a little off." The "feel" is gone.
Framer eliminates this. It's a design tool and a production-ready website builder in one. The prototype I design is the final, live website. The buttery-smooth animations, the interactive components, the pixel-perfect layouts—what you see is exactly what you get. This cuts development time from weeks to days and ensures 100% fidelity to the design.
2. Blazing Fast by Default
We all know that site speed is critical. It's a core factor for Google's SEO rankings and for user retention. A 2-second delay in page load can send bounce rates through the roof.
Framer sites are, by default, incredibly fast. The platform is built from the ground up on modern tech (React) and handles all the complex optimization—image compression, CDN, code minification—automatically. I don't have to wrestle with a mountain of clunky WordPress plugins just to get a good PageSpeed score. My clients get a high-performance site out of the box.
3. True Interaction & Animation Power
This is where Framer truly leaves the competition behind. Other builders can handle a simple "fade-in-on-scroll." Framer handles advanced, dynamic interactions with ease.
Want that "sticky-scroll" storytelling section? That "ID card" hero that animates? That complex, gesture-based mobile menu? In Framer, these are not just possible; they are intuitive to build. It allows me to create the "Apple-level" experiences that clients crave, without the "Apple-level" budget for a team of 10 developers.
For me, the choice is clear. Using Framer means I can spend less time managing plugins and fighting with code, and more time on what actually matters: designing a strategic, beautiful, and effective experience for your users. It's the future of the web, and it's how I'm delivering a tangible advantage to my clients today.
19/05/2025


Why I'm Using Framer for 90% of My Client Sites in 2026
For years, the professional web design debate has been a predictable one: the customization of Webflow versus the ubiquity of WordPress. We all got comfortable in our chosen tools. Then, Framer came along and changed the entire game.
As of 2026, I am building roughly 90% of my client websites in Framer. And it's not just a personal preference—it's a strategic decision that delivers better, faster, and more powerful results for my clients.
Here’s why.
1. The Death of the "Handoff"
The single biggest bottleneck in web design has always been the "handoff." Designers create a perfect, pixel-rich prototype in Figma. Then, they "hand it off" to a developer, who spends weeks trying to translate that vision into code.
It never comes out the same. Interactions get lost. Spacing is "a little off." The "feel" is gone.
Framer eliminates this. It's a design tool and a production-ready website builder in one. The prototype I design is the final, live website. The buttery-smooth animations, the interactive components, the pixel-perfect layouts—what you see is exactly what you get. This cuts development time from weeks to days and ensures 100% fidelity to the design.
2. Blazing Fast by Default
We all know that site speed is critical. It's a core factor for Google's SEO rankings and for user retention. A 2-second delay in page load can send bounce rates through the roof.
Framer sites are, by default, incredibly fast. The platform is built from the ground up on modern tech (React) and handles all the complex optimization—image compression, CDN, code minification—automatically. I don't have to wrestle with a mountain of clunky WordPress plugins just to get a good PageSpeed score. My clients get a high-performance site out of the box.
3. True Interaction & Animation Power
This is where Framer truly leaves the competition behind. Other builders can handle a simple "fade-in-on-scroll." Framer handles advanced, dynamic interactions with ease.
Want that "sticky-scroll" storytelling section? That "ID card" hero that animates? That complex, gesture-based mobile menu? In Framer, these are not just possible; they are intuitive to build. It allows me to create the "Apple-level" experiences that clients crave, without the "Apple-level" budget for a team of 10 developers.
For me, the choice is clear. Using Framer means I can spend less time managing plugins and fighting with code, and more time on what actually matters: designing a strategic, beautiful, and effective experience for your users. It's the future of the web, and it's how I'm delivering a tangible advantage to my clients today.
19/05/2025
