I similarly agree for the Pinterst's 'value driven' onboarding flow [0]. All the points are very bland and generic (and not great UX in my opinion), almost as if they've been auto-generated:
> * Pinterest drives users to its core value quickly by having users select the categories that interest them most.
> * By incorporating their browser button in the onboarding flow, Pinterest makes sure users get value from the app even when not directly logged into the social platform's website.
> * When users click to skip the addition of the browser step, a modal explains the value users will be missing out on without it.
I guess there's some value in 'relatively well known websites UX'. So you can compare what you're doing to other websites.
> * Pinterest drives users to its core value quickly by having users select the categories that interest them most.
> * By incorporating their browser button in the onboarding flow, Pinterest makes sure users get value from the app even when not directly logged into the social platform's website.
> * When users click to skip the addition of the browser step, a modal explains the value users will be missing out on without it.
I guess there's some value in 'relatively well known websites UX'. So you can compare what you're doing to other websites.
[0]: https://www.reallygoodux.io/blog/pinterests-value-driven-onb...