90% of your daily decisions happen automatically, many shaped by environment. Thus, most decisions are a habit, not a deliberate choice. To make smarter choices, design smarter defaults. All you need to do is harness the power of defaults and shape the invisible defaults of your life.
Exercise More
Get a doorway chin up pull up bar and do a couple of pull-ups every time you enter or leave your bedroom
- Lay out your workout clothes the night before and put them next to your bed. The moment you wake up, you’ll have everything ready to go
- Always park your car a healthy distance from your destination
- Take the stairs when you have a choice
Drink More Water
Have a bottle next to your bed so you get in the habit of drinking water immediately after waking up
Sleep Better
Put an alarm on your phone by default an hour before bedtime to remind you to begin your pre-bed ritual
- At that time, leave your laptop and mobile phone in another room and physically unplug the TV
- Leave a book at your bedside table within arm’s reach
Less Phone Time
Disable all notifications, except for your ringtone
- Out of sight, out of mind
- Move all apps to the second screen and keep your home screen empty
- Set your phone to airplane mode an hour before going to bed and only disable it after completing your morning routine
Watch Less TV
Rearrange furniture so that if you want to watch TV you’ll need to move it
Do Defaults Save Lives?
Defaults are so powerful they save lives.
- In organ donation, countries use one of two policies: Required “Opt-In”: people who want to be an organ donor must give explicit consent to doing so
- Default “Opt-Out”: users are signed up as organ donors by default and need to require to opt-out
- Countries with presumed consent policies have consistently higher numbers of transplants
Your “Golden Years” on Autopilot
Automatic enrollment: this means that employees are enrolled by default, forcing them to decide to opt-out in order to not contribute to retirement automatically
- Now employees make smarter decisions by default
- Participation in 401(k)’s skyrockets under these circumstances
Defaults to Make Smarter Decisions
If you plan your defaults, you make smarter decisions every time with little effort
- Default decisions are everywhere
- They are the settings that come out of the box, the selections you make on your computer by hitting enter, the assumptions that people make unless you object, the options available to you because you haven’t changed them
- Defaults are powerful nudges as they require you to actively object for it not to work
- Turn your automatic decisions into good ones and you will naturally make the right choice
The Power of Defaults
Your environment impacts your behavior – often without you even realizing it
- In a continent where countries are very much alike, what could cause such a difference?
- Initially, the researchers thought the difference in donations would be caused by the “big” reasons, such as religion and culture
- But that wasn’t the case
- Could the researchers explain the massive gap between similar countries with a single factor?
Reduce Mindless Internet Browsing
Go cold turkey on your phone and disable the browser app. On the iPhone, go into Settings, turn “Restrictions” on and then you can turn off Safari.
- Disable Chrome in App Settings
- On the computer, start by removing infinity scrolling websites from your bookmarks bar and replace them with informative blogs and learning opportunities
- Install StayFocusd, a chrome extension that lets you block specific websites for a set period of time. You won’t be able to access those sites until the timer expires, even if you restart your computer or delete the application
- Save articles to read later with the Evernote Web Clipper. Choose “Simplified article” and save it to a notebook (I call mine “Read Later”).
- Batch reading of those articles during your leisure time
- Download Audible and always have one audiobook going for while you’re driving or on a walk
- Always have one book going at a time on the Kindle
Make Smarter Decisions Designed By You, Not For You
Most of the times you can re-design defaults to work for you, instead of against you
- Change your environment so it fits your goals
- Re-design all the defaults in your life and decide for yourself what the optimal choice is
Spend Less
Use cash instead
- Never buy something on impulse
- Go for quality, not quantity
- Define a “no spend” day every week
- Have a shopping list on your phone
- Write down all your expenses on a Google Sheets
- Being aware of your spending influences your decisions in the future
Save More
Pay yourself first: create a recurring transfer to a savings account each time you get paid.
- Match bad habits with savings: for every dollar that you spend on something you want to consume less of – such as alcohol – match it with a deposit into savings.
- Micro-transactions feel less painful
Eat healthier
Remove from the house food that isn’t on your diet or you know is unhealthy
- Buy items from the outer edges of the grocery store
- Trick your brain into eating less per meal by using smaller plates and bowls
- Plan your meals in advance so you always know what to eat each day
- Use Sundays to cook for the entire week and freeze excess food
- Do not keep alcohol at home
Positive and Negative Defaults
When you’re faced with a challenge and need to make a decision, your brain starts to look for the path of least resistance
- “Default to zero” is a powerful hack to change behavior through negative reinforcement and force you to make smarter decisions
- If you remove your ability to watch television, you unplug the TV and cancel your subscription
- Now your previous default is not accessible anymore
- You just designed your life as a choice architect
Make Smarter Decisions at Work
Work in full-screen mode to remove all distractions and focus on the task at hand
- Wear headphones
- Plan your entire week on Sunday
- Listen to the same song on repeat
- Design productivity spaces for different types of work
- Request to work remotely for one day per week
- To stop procrastinating, use the 2-minute rule: if it can be done in 2 minutes, just do it; if it takes more than two minutes, start it
- Train other people to respect your productivity, work, and time by using an automatic response
Meetings
Adjust the default assumption of meeting times
- Change the default from 60 to 30 mins as the new “standard” time for meetings
- Define the end time for all meetings and phone calls
- Make it clear that time is limited
- Schedule something else afterward if you have to
Optimizing Other Defaults to Make Smarter Decisions
To make smarter decisions, your goal is to create “good by default” options. By doing so, you must consciously decide to make the choice to do bad.
- Another key strategy is to simplify. Keep your defaults as simple as possible.