While I agree with alttag's comment a million percent, I think you'd be surprised how often companies DO actual UI/UX, just not in the way that we think.<p>Enterprise UX isn't about making the product easier to use, it's about making it more efficient to use, in most cases. I remember working for a large Fortune enterprise company many years ago, and they had a product that, simply put, was for customer, bug and issue tracking. There are a dozen or so REALLY good startups in this scene now (there weren't then) and they're all radically easier to use than the product we had, because they focus on the kind of UI/UX you're talking about.<p>That said, there was a laser sharp focus on making the product more efficient to use. We hired consultants to use the product extensively, and determined that moving some of the buttons around was a more efficient workflow. We determined that DEcreasing the font size allowed for more information to be on the screen at a given time, which allowed highly trained personnel the ability to do work more quickly than if they had to constantly scroll back and forth. Things like this fly in the face of what is largely considered good now, but was not only a priority, but a highly flaunted (and appreciated) selling point.<p>The biggest difference is the customer. Most of the SaaS customers are for things that aren't used religiously, or by a lot of undertrained / underqualified people. If you have a help desk for a 50,000 person company, chances are you're not going to use FogBugz and the like to run your company with. You're going to have something in-house, and you're going to train your people to use scripts, and you're going to have a really efficient (if not necessarily GOOD) help desk that uses these tools day in, day out, repeatedly. They get to learn the product well enough that they don't have to look at it to use it. They learn it as well as most of us know how to type. They know that they can enter last name, tab, first name, tab tab tab phone number enter and voila, there's the customer record.<p>Edit: This was supposed to be a reply to <a href="http://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=3052236" rel="nofollow">http://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=3052236</a>