B2B SaaS books 300% more demos with one UX fix

QuipCheck didn’t need more traffic. They needed to stop losing buyers before the first click.

Removing resistance results in 300% more demo sign-ups for compliance app QuipCheck.

The challenge

QuipCheck sells compliance software for the plant and machinery industry – a sector still buried in clipboards and paperwork. Their tool was solid. Their post-sign-up conversion rate? Excellent.

The problem? Hardly anyone was signing up.

Despite a clear value prop, their homepage was leaking trust. Less than 5% of visitors clicked “Get Started.”
That wasn’t just friction – it was a full-on credibility gap.

QuipCheck sign-up before and after

The approach

If you want action, you remove the friction blocking 95% of your potential buyers.

QuipCheck’s sign-up form was doing the opposite – asking users to fill out 23 fields before they’d even seen the product. It wasn’t a form: it was a filter.

RAMMP flagged the trust gap and advised a clean split: strip the sign-up down to the bare minimum, and move the data capture into onboarding – after the user’s already engaged.

That one change increased demo bookings and inbound enquiries by over 300%.

QuickCheck form before and after.

Why it worked

Buyers were interested – they just weren’t ready to fill out 23 fields to prove it.

QuipCheck had done the hard part: getting potential customers to the sign-up milestone.
But the form created a wall instead of a welcome. It was like showing up for a first date and being handed a mortgage application. You might be a perfect match, but it’s too much, too soon. People saw the effort required and bailed.

The original intent – personalise the product experience – was sound. But asking for deep info upfront created too much resistance.

By moving those questions into onboarding, QuipCheck matched the ask to the user’s emotional commitment. The same 20+ questions, now broken into three simple in-app steps, felt easy once trust had been earned.

Friction dropped. Sign-ups surged. And because the onboarding felt progressive, not painful, retention rates improved too.

 

Apply it in your business

If your product needs a ton of input to work properly, that’s fine – just don’t ask for it all upfront.

New users aren’t ready to commit to a full onboarding interrogation. They just want to see if it’s worth their time.

Here’s what works:

  1. Make sign-up stupidly simple.
    Email + only the necessary fields. That’s it. Any more, and you’re losing people.

  2. Chunk the heavy lifting.
    Break required info into small, logical steps inside the onboarding flow – once trust has been earned.

  3. Use smart defaults.
    Don’t make users fill in everything. Start with placeholders or recommendations to lower effort.

Trello and LinkedIn both nail this: light sign-up, guided onboarding, minimal overwhelm. QuipCheck did the same, and saw sharp lifts in both sign-ups and retention.

Remember: people don’t mind sharing details – they just don’t want to do it before they believe you’re worth it.
Timing is trust.

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