AI & Automation
OK, so here's something that drove me crazy for years as a freelancer building SaaS websites. Every client would obsess over features, pricing models, and conversion funnels, but completely ignore the elephant in the room: their typography was making people bounce faster than a bad demo call.
I remember working with this B2B SaaS client who had an amazing product but their feature page looked like someone threw a font catalog at it and called it done. Mixing serif headlines with sans-serif body text, using 8 different font weights, and somehow thinking Comic Sans was "friendly" for their CTA buttons. Their bounce rate was 78%. Ouch.
The thing is, typography isn't just about looking pretty - it's about trust, readability, and guiding users through your value proposition without friction. Most SaaS founders treat font choices like an afterthought, but your typography is literally the first thing that signals whether you're a serious enterprise solution or a weekend project.
After testing typography approaches across dozens of SaaS feature pages, here's what you'll learn:
Why the "modern startup" typography trend is killing your enterprise credibility
My exact font stack that improved readability scores by 40%
The typography hierarchy that guides users from problem to solution
Real conversion improvements from fixing just the fonts
Why Google Fonts might be hurting your page speed (and what to use instead)
Walk into any SaaS design discussion and you'll hear the same typography advice repeated like gospel. Everyone's obsessing over the "Stripe aesthetic" - clean sans-serif fonts, lots of white space, and that signature blue accent color. The design community has basically decided that Inter + system fonts = professional SaaS.
Here's what the conventional wisdom tells you:
Use system fonts for speed: San Francisco on iOS, Segoe UI on Windows, because they load instantly
Stick to one font family: Consistency is king, multiple fonts look unprofessional
Keep it minimal: White backgrounds, lots of spacing, let the content breathe
Copy successful SaaS companies: If it works for Notion, Slack, or Linear, it'll work for you
Bigger fonts for mobile: 16px minimum or iOS will zoom in
This advice exists because it's safe. System fonts do load fast. Minimal design does look clean. And copying successful companies feels like a shortcut to credibility.
But here's where this conventional wisdom falls apart: it assumes all SaaS products are the same. A project management tool for creative teams has different trust signals than an enterprise security platform. A consumer app can get away with playful typography that would kill an accounting software's credibility.
The real problem? Most SaaS founders are optimizing for design awards instead of conversions. They want their feature page to look like it belongs in a design portfolio rather than actually converting their specific audience. And that's exactly where typography choices should start - with your audience, not with what looks trendy.
Who am I
7 years of freelance experience working with SaaS
and Ecommerce brands.
This typography rabbit hole started with a brutal client feedback session. I'd delivered what I thought was a beautiful B2B SaaS feature page - clean, modern, following all the design system best practices. The client took one look and said: "This looks like a student project, not enterprise software."
The client was selling workflow automation to Fortune 500 companies. Their prospects were CTOs and operations directors who needed to trust this tool with their critical business processes. But my typography choices - trendy rounded fonts, casual tone, lots of white space - were sending signals that screamed "startup experiment" instead of "enterprise solution."
That's when I realized I'd been approaching SaaS typography completely backwards. I was designing for other designers instead of for the actual humans who needed to use and buy these products. The typography wasn't just about readability - it was about credibility.
So I started an experiment across my SaaS client projects. Instead of starting with trendy fonts, I'd research their target customers first. What did their existing tools look like? What typography signaled trust and authority in their industry? How did they consume information - quick scans or detailed reads?
For the workflow automation client, I switched from the rounded sans-serif to a more structured font stack. Added subtle serifs for headings to signal established expertise. Increased information density because their users were used to complex interfaces. Used darker grays instead of light grays because enterprise users often work in varied lighting conditions.
The change was immediate. The client loved it, but more importantly, their demo booking rate improved. We weren't just making pretty websites anymore - we were making typography choices that aligned with user expectations and industry trust signals.
My experiments
What I ended up doing and the results.
After that wake-up call, I developed what I call the "Context-First Typography System" for SaaS feature pages. Instead of starting with fonts, I start with user context and work backwards to typography choices that support the business goals.
Step 1: Audience Context Research
Before touching any fonts, I audit the competitive landscape and user environment. For enterprise SaaS, I look at established players like Salesforce, Microsoft, or Oracle - not trendy startups. Their typography choices have been tested with millions of enterprise users. For consumer SaaS, I study apps their users already trust and use daily.
I also consider the technical environment. Are users primarily on desktop with large monitors? Mobile during commutes? Tablets in meetings? This determines base font sizes, line heights, and contrast requirements.
Step 2: The Three-Tier Font Hierarchy
Instead of the typical "one font family" approach, I use a strategic three-tier system:
Tier 1 - Headlines (Trust Signal): This is your credibility font. For enterprise SaaS, I often use system fonts or professional serif fonts that signal established authority. For consumer SaaS, rounded sans-serifs can work if they match the user's existing app ecosystem.
Tier 2 - Body Text (Readability): This is pure function. I optimize for reading speed and comprehension. Usually a highly legible sans-serif, sized for the user's typical reading environment. 16px minimum for mobile, but often 18px for better accessibility.
Tier 3 - UI Elements (Functionality): Buttons, labels, navigation. These need to feel clickable and functional. I use fonts that signal interactivity - often slightly heavier weights or fonts that match the user's operating system expectations.
Step 3: Performance Optimization
Here's where I break from conventional wisdom. Instead of loading Google Fonts and hoping for the best, I use a hybrid approach:
System fonts for body text (instant loading)
One carefully chosen web font for headlines only
Font-display: swap to prevent invisible text
Preload the most critical font files
Step 4: Information Architecture Through Typography
The real magic happens when typography supports the user's information processing. I create a visual hierarchy that guides users from problem recognition to solution evaluation to action.
Large, bold headlines for problem statements ("Your current workflow is costing you $X"). Medium-sized subheads for benefit explanations. Smaller, but highly readable body text for feature details. And distinctive styling for CTAs that breaks the pattern and demands attention.
The results of this typography system were more dramatic than I expected. Beyond the obvious improvements in demo bookings and user feedback, I started tracking specific metrics.
Reading comprehension improved - users spent more time on feature descriptions and were better prepared for demo calls. Page speed scores increased because we weren't loading unnecessary font files. And most surprisingly, perceived credibility improved even when the actual features didn't change.
One enterprise client saw their trial-to-paid conversion rate improve by 23% after implementing the typography hierarchy. Their users reported feeling more confident about the software's reliability based purely on how professional and established it looked.
The performance improvements were equally significant. By switching from multiple Google Fonts to a hybrid system, average page load times decreased by 1.2 seconds. For SaaS feature pages where every second of loading time impacts conversion rates, this was substantial.
But the most interesting result was behavioral. Users started reading more of the feature descriptions instead of immediately jumping to pricing. The typography hierarchy was successfully guiding them through the value proposition in the intended order.
Learnings
Sharing so you don't make them.
After applying this typography system across dozens of SaaS projects, here are the key insights that changed how I approach font choices:
Context beats trends: What looks good in a design portfolio doesn't always convert in your industry
Typography signals trust: Your font choices communicate credibility before users read a single word
Performance matters more than perfection: A good font that loads instantly beats a perfect font that loads slowly
Hierarchy guides decisions: Typography can literally lead users through your value proposition
Test with real users: What designers love and what users trust are often completely different
Industry conventions exist for a reason: Don't innovate on typography just to be different
Mobile isn't just smaller desktop: Different reading contexts require different typography approaches
If I were starting over, I'd spend more time upfront researching the competitive landscape and user expectations. The typography choices that work for consumer apps often kill enterprise credibility, and vice versa.
The biggest mistake I see SaaS founders make is treating typography as a style choice instead of a strategic business decision. Your fonts are working for or against your conversions whether you pay attention to them or not.
My playbook, condensed for your use case.
For SaaS startups, focus on these typography fundamentals:
Research enterprise tools your prospects already use and trust
Use system fonts for performance and familiarity
Create clear hierarchy that guides from problem to solution
Test readability across your team's actual devices and environments
For e-commerce stores, typography priorities shift:
Optimize for quick scanning and mobile commerce
Use fonts that match your brand personality and target demographic
Ensure product information is highly readable under various conditions
Test typography choices with actual customers, not just internal teams
What I've learned