Evaluate link and button usability
Check if users can quickly find the right path to complete each task.
Discover where their intuition leads them to complete each task and use quantitative data to optimise your usability.
ContactThe click test is a usability test that evaluates users' understanding when interacting with the website or application through clicks on links, buttons, and other interactive areas. In a "click test," participants face a series of tasks, such as finding a specific page, accessing information, or completing an action, using their mouse to click on the areas they believe will help them achieve the goal.
Check if users can quickly find the right path to complete each task.
Detect areas where users pause or get confused and modify the design to help them achieve their goals.
Find out how your CTAs convince your users and direct them to the places where your conversions occur.
A/B test your new designs and choose the most intuitive one for your users.
Accelerate decision-making by providing objective data that demonstrates the importance of the improvements to be made.
Quantify where your users click and provide strategic information about what they are looking for in your product.
Use click testing along with other usability tests to enhance your customers' digital experience.
Turn your users into key contributors to product evolution and enhance their satisfaction and sense of ownership of the final product.
Assess with quantitative data how many users click on the expected place when completing a task.
Over 120,000 people in our panel to ensure you always find those who meet the necessary criteria for your click test.
Supplement your click tests with additional questions within the same questionnaire and expand the collected information.
Visualise on a heat map intuitively the frequency of clicks outside the expected area.
"Working with We are testers is a pleasure: the flexibility, the maximum adaptation to the needs of companies, and the quick access to digital customer insights are a necessary must to remain competitive."
Head of Design Thinking & UX Research