By Cassie Ulvick, Senior UX/UI Designer at Registria
Something interesting has happened over the last few years: the ownership experience now rivals the purchase itself. But while most brands are confident they deliver strong post-purchase experiences, their customers don’t always agree. PwC’s 2025 Customer Experience Survey calls this gap the “loyalty illusion,” and it’s widening.
What sits between expectation and disappointment is the experience people have once they start using the product: the design, the guidance, clarity and reassurance. That’s the work I focus on every day. After years designing ownership journeys at Registria, I’ve seen how the right interaction at the right moment can turn confusion into confidence.
If you want a clearer picture, here's our breakdown of the Ownership Experience (OX).
UX has become mission-critical because it now directly influences the moments that matter most when customers need help, reassurance, direction or confidence.
When you look closely at how people interact with ownership tools like Concierge, you notice a pattern. No one opens them during their leisure time. In fact, they show up when something’s going on like troubleshooting a weird noise a product suddenly makes. These are tense moments. And the UI either helps or makes it worse. If it’s clear, people relax. If it’s messy, they get frustrated. The UX/UI becomes the brand’s “second first impression,” and sometimes it’s the one that leaves a stronger mark than the unboxing.
To meet those expectations, the experience has to feel effortless. Users don’t have the patience, or desire, to dig through outdated FAQ pages or layered support categories. Clear navigation, smart information architecture and clean UI reduce cognitive load and help people get what they need quickly. When those friction points disappear, users naturally help themselves, which deflects calls for support teams and makes customers feel capable rather than stuck.
Good design does far more than tidy up a workflow; it builds brand affinity. Consistent, polished digital experiences reinforce credibility. When the interface feels premium, the brand feels premium — and that sets the stage for deeper engagement after the purchase.
An easy-to-use interface encourages registrants to return for care tips, contextual recommendations, upgrades, warranties or repairs. Each return visit becomes another opportunity to strengthen the relationship. That’s a major reason we’ve invested so deeply in our OXM Platform. When a great ownership experience UX/UI handles those moments well, brands often see more registrations, more repeat interactions and more natural upsell opportunities throughout the ownership lifecycle.
There’s also the very real operational upside. As Deloitte’s CX research shows, intuitive self-service tools can significantly reduce support volume. When a well-designed flow solves an issue in seconds, customers don’t escalate, leave annoyed or churn. And in markets where products look increasingly alike, post-purchase UX becomes the clearest differentiator between you and your competitors
If you want to see how brands are elevating their ownership experiences visually, this tour offers a nice snapshot of real use cases.
Meet users where they are
Not everyone who buys your product is a tech expert. Your design has to support the seasoned power user and the person who’s never scanned a QR code before.
Reduce stress during moments of need
Most OX interactions happen when something isn’t working. Empathetic UI, plain language and guided flows turn stressful moments into confidence-building ones.
Build for accessibility and inclusion
Good UX isn’t good if it leaves people out. Accessible design isn’t optional; it’s part of modern digital responsibility.
Smooth UX/UI is no longer a “nice add-on” to the ownership experience; it is the experience. It builds trust, drives loyalty and sets brands apart long after the purchase.
At Registria, we’re pushing hard on user-centered design because we’ve seen how much it changes real-world ownership moments. We get to watch millions of interactions play out across our platform and that stream of insight is what lets us keep improving, adjusting and building better experiences over time. Our CEO, Collin, recently wrote about this in The Risk of Doing Nothing, the idea that brands can’t afford to wait out uncertainty when their customers are already moving forward. A thoughtful, ownership-focused UX/UI strategy is one of the most practical ways to keep momentum.