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55 - When more options are actually good in your episode
Episode 55

55 - When more options are actually good in your episode

The Credibility Minute · Jen deHaan

April 3, 20263m 32s

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Show Notes

Choice overload is real, but it isn't universal. While the "Jam Study" (discussed in Ep. 54) shows that too many options can paralyze decision-making, context matters. Research indicates that the impact of choice depends on four factors: complexity, difficulty, certainty, and goals.

For your content, the critical distinction lies between what you show and what you ask the listener to do. You can offer multiple examples or perspectives to help a listener understand a concept because these are not choices—they are illustrations. However, when it comes to the "action step" (what they must do next), you must still narrow it down to one specific path to avoid cognitive friction.

In this micro-episode:

  1. The four factors that determine if choice overload will happen
  2. Why experts might prefer more options while novices need fewer
  3. The difference between "showing" (examples) and "doing" (calls to action)

Resources:

Episode #54 about jam study and our shows: https://player.captivate.fm/episode/e4f5ca9e-72ce-4372-a703-e8caa23055eb/

Choice overload: https://thedecisionlab.com/biases/choice-overload-bias

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S1057740814000916

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