Claude Design

Generate a Navigation UX Review

Prompt
Review navigation patterns for [website/app]. Suggest improvements and user flow changes. Focus on clarity.
Why it works

Reducing navigation friction improves usability.

If you're struggling to improve your website or app's navigation, Claude can help you conduct a thorough UX review without hiring an expensive consultant. This prompt asks Claude to analyze your navigation patterns, identify friction points, and recommend specific improvements to your user flow. It's perfect for product managers, UX designers, startup founders, and anyone responsible for improving how visitors move through your digital product. Whether your users are getting lost in your menu structure or struggling to find key features, this prompt gives you actionable feedback focused on clarity and simplicity.

To use this prompt effectively, replace the placeholder [website/app] with specific details about what you're reviewing. For example, instead of leaving it generic, you might write "Review navigation patterns for our e-commerce checkout flow" or "Review navigation patterns for our SaaS onboarding experience." The more specific you are about which part of your product you want reviewed, the more targeted Claude's suggestions will be. You can even describe your current navigation structure briefly so Claude understands your starting point.

When you run this prompt, expect Claude to provide a structured analysis that breaks down your navigation's strengths and weaknesses, then offers concrete suggestions for improvement. You'll typically get recommendations about menu organization, labeling clarity, button placement, and user flow optimization. Claude often suggests removing unnecessary steps, consolidating related options, or restructuring your information architecture for better logical flow.

For better results, include context about your users in your prompt. If you mention who typically uses your product and what they're trying to accomplish, Claude can tailor recommendations to match real user behavior rather than generic best practices. This transforms the output from decent advice into specifically targeted solutions that actually address your users' pain points.