UX audit for websites, apps and e-commerce for businesses in Lviv and the region — a report with findings prioritised by impact and effort, with real session recordings. I work with online stores, B2B portals of furniture manufacturers and Lviv SaaS products.
Fill out a short form or message me — tell me about your product and its challenges
We'll discuss goals, metrics, and audit scope — you'll get a clear action plan
Full audit with specific recommendations, prioritization, and an implementation roadmap
I conduct comprehensive usability analysis from multiple perspectives
Expert interface evaluation based on Nielsen's 10 heuristics. I identify systemic usability issues that prevent users from achieving their goals.
Conversion funnel analysis and identification of user drop-off points. I provide specific recommendations to increase conversion at every stage.
Detailed mobile experience review: responsiveness, speed, navigation convenience, and touch interaction quality.
Comparative UX analysis of your product against key competitors. I identify strengths and opportunities for differentiation.
Deep user behavior analysis based on analytics data, heatmaps, and session recordings. I uncover real interaction patterns.
WCAG 2.1 compliance review. I ensure your interface is accessible to people with disabilities.
We discuss business goals, target audience, and current issues. I gain access to analytics and other data sources.
I conduct a detailed interface analysis using Nielsen's heuristics and other UX principles, documenting every finding.
I research analytics, heatmaps, session recordings, and conversion funnels to uncover real behavior patterns.
I compare UX solutions with key competitors, identify best practices and improvement opportunities.
I prioritize findings by impact and implementation complexity, creating detailed recommendations with mockups.
I present the audit results with a detailed report, improvement roadmap, and answer all questions.
Choose the optimal package for your project
One-time 2-hour session
$300$400What's included:
Comprehensive analysis in 1 week
$800$1000What's included:
1 month collaboration
$2000$2500What's included:
Comparison with other options
| Oleksandr Filyuk | UX Agency | |
|---|---|---|
| Price | from $500 | from $500 ×2-3 |
| Unique approach | ✅ Individual | 📋 Template-based |
| SEO optimization | ✅ Included | 💰 Extra charge |
| Direct contact | ✅ Direct | ❌ Through manager |
| Timelines | ✅ From 1 week | ⏳ From 1 month |
| Post-launch support | ✅ 30 days free | 💰 Extra charge |
| Experience | ✅ 15+ years | 🔄 Various performers |
If you’re reading this page, you most likely already have a working website, online store or mobile app, but the metrics aren’t encouraging: traffic comes in, requests don’t; users add items to the cart but don’t reach checkout; new SaaS users register but don’t come back the next day. You sense the problem is somewhere inside the product — but can’t pinpoint exactly where. A UX audit is a systematic investigation that answers that question with data, not guesses. I’m Alex Filiuk, Senior UI/UX designer with 15+ years of practice, running UX audits for businesses in Lviv and the Lviv region, and for clients from Kyiv, Lviv, Odesa, Dnipro, the US and Europe. The portfolio holds over 130 projects, a large share of which started with a UX analysis of an existing product before the redesign.
This page goes through, in detail: what a UX audit really is (and what only pretends to be one), which blocks it consists of, which methods I use, which typical findings appear in Lviv region businesses, how much it costs, and how to choose the right specialist. No filler, no marketing promises — only working material that helps you make a decision.
In a city of 240,000+ residents and a strong small-and-medium business sector, digital competition grows quarter by quarter. Ten years ago “having a website” was enough — today it doesn’t solve anything. Every competitor, from a Lviv online store to a national brand, fights for user attention in the first 5–10 seconds after the page loads. UX is not “a pretty picture” — it’s the science of how a person thinks, navigates and decides.
For a Lviv business UX has three applied consequences:
The Ukrainian market (including the Lviv region) often confuses two different products: a UX audit and a design review. They are not the same.
The difference is critical: a design review delivers 50 scattered comments, 30 of which are taste. A UX audit delivers 50–150 findings with prioritisation, links to standards and an estimate of business impact. The first you can “listen and forget”; the second is your action plan for the next 3 months.
Every audit I run is 6 parallel blocks, merged into a single report. None of them gives the full picture alone — only together they produce a reliable result.
Over years of practice I’ve assembled a recurring “problem map” specific to the Ukrainian and especially the Lviv market. Here are the top 10 findings I encounter in 80% of projects:
This doesn’t mean your site has all 10. But 5–7 of them is the typical picture, even for well-built products. The audit not only delivers the list but also the order of fixes by business impact.
If you need it faster — there’s an express format of 5–7 working days for a single landing or single user flow. Suitable when you’re preparing a redesign and need a quick snapshot before kickoff.
No audit is “magic in the designer’s head”. It uses a concrete stack:
The portfolio includes plenty of projects that started with an audit of an existing product and then progressed to redesign or CRO. Among them — consumer apps, CRM systems for the automotive business, e-commerce, medical platforms, B2B services. In each case I started with mapping the current state, talking to users and the team, analysing the analytics — and only then drawing interfaces. That guaranteed the new version wasn’t just “prettier” but actually performed better against concrete business indicators.
If you want examples relevant to your niche — head to the “Projects” section or get in touch via the contact form. I’ll pick 5–10 most relevant cases and show exactly how the UX audit affected the metrics.
The price comes from the scope of the audited object. Approximately (exact figures in the “Pricing” block):
If you order an audit bundled with a follow-up UI/UX implementation, development or conversion optimisation, the audit cost is fully or partially credited toward the main project. This is the most common format for Lviv clients who want not just to receive a report but to see results immediately.
Marketplaces offer audits “for $100 in 3 days”. That isn’t an audit — it’s a template the freelancer fills in without engaging the brain. Here are 5 reasons this path doesn’t pay off for a serious Lviv business:
The alternative in Lviv is me. 15+ years of practice, knowledge of the Lviv region market, a transparent process, a guaranteed result and the option to meet in person. Pricing is competitive with the marketplace (because I don’t pay platform commissions) — but the depth is on a different level.
A UX audit is often the first stage of broader work. Services that logically follow or run alongside:
I work not only with the Lviv region. If you have offices across several regions or are planning regional expansion — the approach is the same, the method is the same. Other locations:
The full list of locations is on the “Service Areas” page.
If you have a concrete request — fill in the contact form or write to me on email/Telegram (contacts in the footer). The first consultation is free and lasts up to 60 minutes. I’ll pre-screen your product, ask a few diagnostic questions and tell you which audit scope you actually need — basic, standard or premium. No upselling unnecessary scope — if an express audit is enough, I’ll say so plainly.
Ready to help your business in Lviv and the Lviv region find and fix the loss points inside your product. Not “play with colours”, but raise concrete business indicators: conversion, retention, ARPU, NPS. That is the work of a UX auditor who works for results.