Many pre-purchase questions look technical on the surface.
Dimensions, monitor compatibility, desk layouts, arm extensions—these are the kinds of questions customers often ask before buying an ergonomic workspace product.
But in many cases, the real concern is much simpler:
Will this setup actually work for me?
In one case, a customer was interested in a standing desk and monitor arm but had a very specific workspace goal. They wanted to maximize usable desk space while keeping two monitors positioned in a particular way.
The challenge wasn't that the answer was hidden in the specifications.
The challenge was that the exact measurement the customer needed wasn't something we had previously tested.
We could have simply pointed back to the product page and shared the available specifications. Instead, we took time to better understand what the customer was trying to achieve and manually measured the setup as closely as possible.
The measurement itself wasn't complicated.
What mattered was showing the customer that their question deserved a real answer.
Once we shared the information, the customer felt confident enough to move forward with the purchase.
What This Reinforced for Us
Most customers don't struggle because information is unavailable.
They struggle because they are trying to apply that information to a real workspace, a real monitor setup, or a real daily routine.
A specification tells someone what a product is.
Clarity helps them understand whether the product fits their life.
That's an important difference.
Why Small Efforts Matter
One thing we've learned from supporting ergonomic products is that customers often remember effort more than expertise.
They understand that not every answer exists immediately.
What they appreciate is knowing that someone was willing to look deeper instead of providing a generic response.
Sometimes a few extra minutes spent measuring, checking, or validating an assumption can remove the uncertainty that prevents a purchase decision.
And even more importantly, it helps build trust before the product ever arrives.
A Clear Judgment
From our experience supporting ergonomic workspaces, customers rarely need more specifications.
They need confidence that those specifications apply to their situation.
When support focuses on understanding the goal behind the question rather than simply answering it, customers make better decisions—and trust grows naturally.