Fewer Steps
Two numbered columns comparing the same task, nine steps beside three, each led by a step count and time, with a card explaining the gap.
Two numbered columns comparing the same task, nine steps beside three, each led by a step count and time, with a card explaining the gap.
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Fewer Steps settles a speed claim by counting clicks instead of asserting them. A centered header frames the same monthly report done two ways, then two columns run the task as numbered procedures: nine muted steps in the usual stack on the left, three confident steps in the product on the right. Each column leads with a step count stat and a time estimate, and a small card under the short list explains where the missing six steps went, so the shorter procedure reads as earned rather than trimmed.
The two step lists and the absorbed steps note each live in their own array, so the task, the counts, and the explanation all swap out without touching the layout. A footnote records how the timing was measured, and the whole block is built from theme tokens with no external images.
Reach for this block when your core pitch is less work, and a vague faster deserves a number a buyer can picture. On a comparison landing page for a project management or reporting tool it works well after the feature story, where a reader who believes you are capable still needs to see the day to day effort shrink. The absorbed steps card matters most here, because it proves the short list dropped work rather than hiding it.
A natural flow around it on a Marketing Pro page:
Before
After
The obvious fit is a repeated task done the old way against done in your product. A few other ways to use the frame:
Tip: keep the footnote specific about how you timed the task. A named month, source count, and reviewer make the step counts read as measured rather than invented.