I love the future vs. past framing here, especially what you mentioned about budgeting. It's easy to get caught up in the data viz and analysis (especially for self-improvement nerds like us) and forget that the point of the product, in theory, is to produce real results for the user.
It would take some great and sensitive UX writers, but I can see the budgeting app version of this for someone who maybe overspent on dining out being something like "Here's your month in review. Our thrifty tip for next month: Check out tasty recipes for your meal plan."
I love the future vs. past framing here, especially what you mentioned about budgeting. It's easy to get caught up in the data viz and analysis (especially for self-improvement nerds like us) and forget that the point of the product, in theory, is to produce real results for the user.
It would take some great and sensitive UX writers, but I can see the budgeting app version of this for someone who maybe overspent on dining out being something like "Here's your month in review. Our thrifty tip for next month: Check out tasty recipes for your meal plan."
Thanks for the brain tickle!