Form vs Function: How Customer Experience Shapes Your Businesses Reputation

Form or Function: How Do You Make Your Choices?

I recently had salads at two local restaurants.

Form v Function

Example 1: Form Over Function

The first salad was beautiful.

Each ingredient was carefully placed in its own section of the bowl. Clean. Organized. Visually impressive.

It looked like something designed for a magazine cover.

But the moment it arrived, my first thought was:

“How am I supposed to mix this without spilling everything everywhere?”

Example 2: Form Follows Function

The second salad was also beautiful.

But in a different way.

The ingredients were mixed evenly, creating a balanced and colorful presentation.

The Difference Was Not Taste

Both salads were good.

The difference was not flavor, but  experience.

One prioritized presentation first. The other prioritized usability first.

Why This Matters in Business

This is often seen  in business:

  • Website design
  • Product development
  • Customer onboarding
  • Service delivery
  • User experience (UX)

You can have something that looks incredible.

But if it is not intuitive and creates friction, it will slow your business down.

Form vs Function in Customer Experience

In product and service design, there are two approaches:

1. Form Over Function

Focus on aesthetics, branding, and visual impact first.

This can create strong first impressions, but sometimes adds friction in real use.

2. Form Follows Function

Focus on usability first, then layer design on top.

This creates smoother experiences and faster adoption.

What Smart Businesses Do

The best businesses do not choose one over the other.

They balance both.

They:

  • Design for clarity first
  • Add beauty without adding friction
  • Remove confusion before adding style
  • Think about how customers actually interact with the product

Because experience is what customers remember.

The Customer Experience Reality

The customer may not always be right.

But their experience always defines your brand in the real world.

No matter how good something looks, if it is hard to use, people notice.

And they talk about it.

Final Thought

Details matter.

Sometimes even a salad teaches you that.

And Yes… I Should Have Gotten the Burger

Because at least then, there would have been no confusion about how to eat it.

Build Products and Services That Customers Actually Enjoy Using

At Dancey Growth Group, we help businesses align design, systems, and customer experience so that form and function work together, not against each other.

Visit our Contact Page to start the conversation