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DKV Seguros — UX & CRO Case Study

We turned “pretty but hesitant” insurance landings into a confident conversion engine—no redesign, just disciplined CRO, sharper messages, and hard‑won usability truth.

From “pretty pages” to a testing machine: we mapped funnel friction, rewired content hierarchy, and shipped A/B‑backed UI that turned hesitant visitors into confident, qualified leads.

Role

UX & Product Design Consultant (Contractor) via Cloud District

Role

UX & Product Design Consultant (Contractor) via Cloud District

Client / Market

DKV Seguros, health insurance, Spain

Timeline

2020–2021

Who might find this case interesting?

Leaders in regulated, high‑consideration B2C (insurance, finance, healthcare) who need measurable funnel gains without breaking brand, legal, or tech constraints.

Product teams trying to prove impact fast turning audits into a CRO pipeline of small bets, clear metrics, and repeatable wins the org can sustain.

Designers and PMs who value evidence over opinion: analytics + usability + content strategy to resolve message–intent mismatches and reduce form friction.

Overview

DKV Seguros needed more (and better) inbound leads from their web funnels. The brand was strong, yet landing pages, shell navigation, and contracting flows weren’t converting as expected. Messaging, hierarchy, and friction in forms diluted intent at the very moments that mattered.

I was brought in to impose clarity: diagnose where confidence was breaking, define testable hypotheses, and deliver a pipeline of incremental improvements that could move the needle without a full redesign.

Strategic Discovery Focus

I started with a mixed‑methods audit: analytics, session recordings, heuristic reviews, and a content/IA scan of key landings and the quote/contracting path. Stakeholder conversations helped surface unspoken constraints (regulatory copy, brand tone) and success metrics.

From the evidence, we framed hypotheses around three themes:

  1. Message–intent mismatch on high‑traffic landings (value claims over clarity).
  2. Copywriting & navigation ambiguity (users unsure where to compare or start a quote).
  3. Form friction & reassurance gaps in contracting (microcopy, trust cues, help states).

Project Constraints

These constraints shaped a lean, test‑first approach: prototype fast, measure, keep what works.

Approach & Decisions

Outcome

Exact figures are confidential, but the winning variants delivered clear gains: more visitors clicked through to start a quote, and fewer dropped out of the tested form steps.

Methods & Tools

Methods: CRO design, accessibility reviews, user observation, A/B testing, card sorting, rapid prototyping, expert reviews, field studies, analytics audits. Tools: Figma, Google Optimize, Google Analytics, Hotjar, HubSpot CRM/CMS, Excel, flowcharting tools, gSuite, Trello, Slack.

Deliverables

Learnings & Next Steps

What proved out

Message–intent alignment beats polish. Plain headlines and direct CTAs outperformed branded slogans.

Friction hides in microcopy and states. Inline help, clearer errors, and progressive disclosure lifted completion without new features.

Accessibility wins convert. Better contrast and focus states correlated with lower drop‑off on long forms.

What I’d refine next

Scale the CRO cadence: For each test, define the hypothesis, the success metric, the owner, and the decision rule, and aim for two tests per sprint.

Deepen segmentation: tailor landings by entry intent (SEO, paid, email) and visitor state (new vs. returning).

Instrument end‑to‑end: Track the entire journey from quote start to submission to policy issuance to close the loop.

Explore conversational quoting for mobile and low‑attention contexts.

Media & Screenshots of the Project

NDA note: no screenshots included; artifacts remained internal.