UX Writing & Microcopy
Content is design. A beautifully designed interface with confusing, robotic, or abrasive text is a broken interface. UX writing is the art of crafting the text that users see when interacting with software.
Microcopy Matters
Microcopy refers to the small snippets of text that guide the user: button labels, tooltips, error messages, and empty states. While small, they have a massive impact on the user's emotional state and task success.
Rules of Expert UX Writing
- Be Clear over Clever: Don't use puns in critical error messages. The user is already frustrated; clarity is the priority.
- Never Blame the User:
Bad: "You entered an invalid email."
Good: "This email address seems to be missing an '@' symbol." - Action-Oriented Verbs: Button labels should describe exactly what will happen when clicked. Instead of a generic "Submit", use "Create Account" or "Send Message".
Empty States
When a user opens an app for the first time, there is no data. Instead of a blank screen, expert UX writers use the "Empty State" to educate and encourage the user to take their first action (e.g., "Your cart is lonely. Let's find some great products!").