Tooltips that clarify actions instantly
Tooltips provide contextual explanations directly within software interfaces. By highlighting fields, buttons, or features, they give users the information they need to understand an action immediately and continue their task with confidence.

With over 200 companies trained, Lemon Learning helps thousands of employees every day to better use their business applications.

Complex interfaces slow users down
Enterprise applications often contain dozens of fields, buttons, and configuration options that are not always intuitive. When users are unsure what a field means or what information is required, they either make mistakes or stop their task to search for help.
Providing clear contextual explanations removes this friction and helps users move forward without interruption.
Contextual help exactly where users need it
Provide contextual information
Explain fields, buttons, or interface elements so users understand what information is required.
Validate user input
Guide users when entering data by indicating mandatory fields or the expected format.
Trigger additional guidance
Use tooltips to launch guides or provide deeper explanations when more assistance is needed.
Tooltips at the exact point of action
Tooltips appear when users hover over or interact with specific elements in the interface. Each tooltip provides a short explanation, definition, or instruction that clarifies what the user should do next.
Because the information appears exactly where the question arises, users can immediately understand the interface and continue their task.

Designed for precise, contextual guidance
'We had fields that everyone interpreted differently. One tooltip cleared it up and suddenly the data became consistent.”
“We used to rely on calendar invites for mandatory steps. Now with push notifications users get reminded when it matters, and the completion rate stays on track.”
“People weren’t resisting the new tool, they were just unsure. Tooltips gave them that little reassurance right where they hesitated.”