# When does positive friction improve retention or conversion?

Author: Ali Abouelatta
Source date: 2024-01-29
Tags: positive friction, onboarding, retention, conversion
HTML: https://lazyweb.com/research/positive-friction
Markdown: https://lazyweb.com/research/positive-friction.md

## Primary visual

Local image URL: https://lazyweb.com/research-assets/positive-friction/09-positive-friction-summary.webp
Original image URL: https://substack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com/public/images/b6d0798a-45db-4df8-b557-9cfb25b1367f_1106x831.png
Alt text: Positive friction summary visual from First 1000.
Image description: A summary visual frames positive friction as effort that also creates value, motivation, or confidence.

Short answer: Positive friction works when the added effort also increases perceived value, motivation, or commitment. Ali's examples include Duolingo streak goals, long wellness onboarding flows, and purchase flows that add explicit choice instead of hiding the decision.

## Evidence

The issue combines retention, onboarding, and purchase-flow examples to show that more effort can work when it makes the user feel more invested.

## What changed

- Duolingo added goal-setting friction at a retention moment.
- Wellness apps ask many onboarding questions to make personalization feel valuable.
- Purchase flows can add plan choice when the choice itself builds confidence.

## Why it matters

- Removing friction is easier than adding it, so added friction needs a clear user-side payoff.
- The useful test is whether the effort makes the user more committed, informed, or confident.

## Sources

- [1] Lazyweb Research: Positive Friction. Defines positive friction as adding value and effort at the same time; cites Rise as 43 onboarding steps and Loona as 19 screens. [Source](https://read.first1000.co/p/positive-friction)