Customers don’t see the full power of your product page
When I analysed the Siccas Guitars page, it became obvious: the user was overwhelmed by choice. Audio samples, video reviews, technical specifications, value blocks (“Returns guarantee”, “Delivery safety”, “Trust”, “Shipping”), dropdown image category menus (“All / Video / Front / Full View / Back & Sides / Neck & Tuner / Certificates”) – all this richness wasn't driving sales. Instead, it was creating a wall of visual noise.
The risk was transparent: lost sales due to cognitive overload. The client felt that his premium product was “sounding” quieter online than it could. Customers were confused – they didn't know how to open a video, switch audio, or expand details. The functionality remained invisible.

Engineering an invisible guide
To solve the “information noise” problem, I rejected the idea of a simple screencast. Instead, I designed a virtual guide through the interface – an animation that leads the eye along the “golden path”: from gallery to values, from details to the video in Overview.
My tool was the Clean Flat 2D style. I took the brand’s own code – deep dark (#0d0c0a) and golden accent (#d1a16a) – so the animation looks like a native part of the product, not a foreign element.
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Attention management: I didn't just show buttons. I used cursor micro‑motion, hover light accents, and a ripple effect on click to physically direct the user’s foveal vision. The viewer’s eye physiologically cannot ignore this movement.
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Story rhythm: I built 10 key scenes into a single dramaturgy: smooth scroll → thumbnail click → category menu open → fullscreen zoom → video & audio playback → expand “Values” and “Details” accordions → transition via a detail to the filter page → Overview tab → video in Overview → Guitar Care Tips block. Each action is separated by a smooth transition (easeOutCubic), creating the feel of a premium tour.



From files to a business arsenal
The project evolved in two stages. First, I delivered the desktop version. The result exceeded expectations: the work was highly appreciated not only by the client but also by the company’s management (“Very cool work”). This immediately led to a second contract – adapting the video for a mobile audience.
The final package included:
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Master video (Desktop): Complete “golden path” of the user through the page (16:9)
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Mobile version: Adapted vertical version for smartphones
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Preview images: Static frames for the catalogue

Main ROI proof
The success of the project was measured not only by the quality of the picture. The client immediately started implementing the video, noting that the functionality is now “easily readable”. The work received the highest rating on the platform, confirming a simple thesis: clarity sells better than pressure.
Is your product page also drowning in functionality?
Let’s turn your interface into a clear story that sells.
P.S. If you want to see how this project fits into a global strategy, visit my “Laboratory” at startfire.org. There I reveal the methodology behind such solutions.
