The QLUXE About Page was designed to communicate trust and clarity while maintaining the premium feel established on the homepage. My goal was to present the company’s story in a way that feels struct…

LinkedIn Content Strategy & Writing Style
Product (UI/UX) Designer • Framer Developer • Webflow Developer
1 person tracking this creator on Viral Brain
Bright Baiden positions himself as a high-fidelity bridge between aesthetic UI/UX design and technical web implementation. His content strategy centers on systematic design storytelling, where he meticulously breaks down how specific layout choices, such as balanced spacing and clear hierarchy, contribute to a brand's overall credibility. What makes him notable is his focus on the continuity of user experience, treating individual pages not as isolated assets but as integral parts of a larger, cohesive digital system. By intersecting professional transparency with technical execution in tools like Framer and Webflow, he offers a value proposition rooted in the intentionality of "premium" design that remains functional and easy to scan.
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The QLUXE About Page was designed to communicate trust and clarity while maintaining the premium feel established on the homepage. My goal was to present the company’s story in a way that feels struct…
0.2 posts/week
Posts / Week
1
Total Posts Analyzed
LOW
Posting Frequency
4%
Avg Engagement Rate
STABLE
Performance Trend
190
Avg Length (Words)
MEDIUM
Depth Level
INTERMEDIATE
Expertise Level
6/10
Uniqueness Score
NO
Question Usage
0%
Response Rate
Writing style breakdown
Professional, measured, and neutral.
Informative and descriptive rather than persuasive or emotional.
Formal but accessible; clear and plain business English.
The voice feels like a design or UX professional explaining decisions to a reasonably knowledgeable audience.
Clearly more formal than casual.
No slang, no contractions (e.g., uses "was designed" instead of "was designed to", "does not" instead of "doesn't" if it appeared).
Vocabulary leans toward professional UX/branding terminology: "premium feel", "structured", "easy to scan", "visually consistent", "clear hierarchy", "balanced spacing", "supporting visuals", "credibility", "professionalism", "continuity".
What the page is meant to do.
How the layout is designed and why.
How it fits into the broader system.
Invitation for feedback.
No digressions, no jumps in topic; everything is tightly aligned with the subject (the About Page).
Calm, low-key, and even-toned.
Energy level is moderate to low: no hype, no drama, no exaggerated claims.
Emotion is understated; trust, clarity, and professionalism are implied through word choice, not through emotional language.
Emphasis on clarity and function: the text describes design intent and user experience rather than telling a story or selling aggressively.
communicate trust and clarity while maintaining the premium feel
structured, easy to scan and visually consistent
clear hierarchy, balanced spacing and straightforward storytelling
Focus on user impact: "without overwhelming the user", "helps users understand who the company is."
No rhetorical questions, no overt humor, no metaphors. It is very literal and direct.
Primarily third person: "the user", "users", "the company", "this page".
Occasional first person singular: "My goal was to present..."
No second-person "you" in this sample.
The tone is explanatory rather than instructive. The author talks about their own design decisions and the page’s role, not about what the reader should do.
No direct commands (e.g., "Try this").
The only line that approaches a CTA is "Feedback is welcome." Even this is framed as an invitation rather than a directive.
Overall, the style favors explanation ("was designed to communicate") over instruction.
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