
Why the SaaS loses 40% of users in the first month
The data nobody wants to look at
According to Hotjar, 75% of SaaS users abandon a product in the first week due to poor onboarding. Not because the product is bad. Because the path to realizing the product is good is too long, too confusing, or simply nonexistent.
Onboarding is not a tutorial
The most common confusion: treating onboarding as a sequence of instructions. "Click here, then here, then configure this." The user follows along, finishes, and still doesn't know what the product does for them.
Effective onboarding takes the user to their first moment of value as quickly as possible. Not to the last step of a tour. To the first "oh, so that's it."
Designing the first moment of value
Every SaaS has an "aha moment" — the instant when the user concretely understands the product's value. For Slack, it's receiving the first message. For Notion, it's creating the first page that solves a real problem. For Figma, it's collaborating in real time for the first time.
The job of onboarding design is to shorten the path to that moment. Remove friction. Make decisions for the user where possible. Fill with example data where an empty field would inhibit action.
The cost of early churn
Every user who churns in the first month carried an acquisition cost that will never be recovered. In SaaS with a free trial, that cost is amplified: you paid for the user, they tested, didn't perceive the value, and left. And probably won't come back.
Investing in onboarding isn't a design cost. It's protection for your CAC.


