--- id: ins_ux-change-target-emotion-is-relief operator: Emily Pick operator_role: Product Marketer at Docebo co_operators: [] source_url: "https://www.linkedin.com/posts/emilypick_we-have-20-product-updates-rolling-out-to-activity-7455262155609624576-WtbQ" source_type: post source_title: We have 20 product updates rolling out to customers source_date: 2026-04-30 captured_date: 2026-05-07 domain: [pmm, product-marketing] lifecycle: [launch, messaging, positioning] maturity: applied artifact_class: playbook score: { originality: 4, specificity: 4, evidence: 3, transferability: 4, source: 3 } tier: B related: [ins_emily-pick-pmm-traits-craft-empathy-adaptability, ins_jolt-effect-customer-indecision] raw_ref: --- # When shipping a workflow change, the target emotion is relief, not excitement ## Claim Workflow-change launches land better when positioned as anxiety resolution rather than feature announcements. Separate the user's anxiety from the IT admin's anxiety, dissolve each surface distinctly, and adoption follows. ## Mechanism When a product changes how users work, the default emotional response is friction: relearning effort, lost shortcuts, uncertain outcomes. Framing a workflow change as a feature to be excited about fights against that baseline. Framing it as removal of existing friction meets users where they are. For admin-controlled deployments, there is a second anxiety layer: fear of IT disruption. Launches that dissolve each surface independently outperform bundled launches that address neither clearly. ## Conditions Holds when: the product change modifies an existing workflow that users have memorized. Fails when: the change introduces net-new functionality with no prior workflow to disturb, where excitement is the appropriate emotional target. ## Evidence Pick's Docebo launch paired two features: Companion (ambient browser extension, free to all customers, removing friction for end users) and Launch Pad (admin-controlled timing for major changes, removing IT friction). Both were positioned as anxiety resolution, not feature value. ## Signals - Launch copy uses "so you don't have to" or "without leaving" over "now you can" - Adoption metrics show faster time-to-first-use than prior workflow launches - Support ticket volume in the first 30 days post-launch is lower than baseline - Admin and end-user messaging are separated, not combined ## Counter-evidence Teams in net-new expansion markets (new verticals, new user personas) often need excitement-first framing because anxieties around an old workflow are not present. Anxiety resolution messaging assumes users have an existing relationship with the product being changed. It also risks underselling genuinely novel capability if the relief frame is applied too broadly.