When Making Decisions, Are You a Satisficer or a Maximizer?

When Making Decisions, Are You a Satisficer or a Maximizer?

Self-knowledge is a key to a happy life, but it's very hard to know ourselves.

One interesting question: Are you a satisficer or maximizer?

Satisficers (yes, satisfice is a word, I checked) are those who make a decision or take action once their criteria are met. That doesn’t mean they’ll settle for mediocrity; their criteria can be very high; but as soon as they find the car, the hotel, or the pasta sauce that has the qualities they want, they’re satisfied.

Maximizers want to make the optimal decision. So even if they see a bicycle or a photographer that would seem to meet their requirements, they can’t make a decision until after they’ve examined every option, so they know they’re making the best possible choice.

Most people are a mix of both approaches. For example, one friend was a satisficer about renting an apartment, but a maximizer about buying an apartment. As a consequence, he and his wife are renting an apartment now, because they had to move, and they’re still searching for the perfect apartment to buy.

In a fascinating book, The Paradox of Choice, Barry Schwartz argues that satisficers tend to be happier than maximizers. Maximizers must spend a lot more time and energy to reach a decision, and they’re often anxious about whether they are, in fact, making the best choice.

The difference between the two approaches may be one reason some people find a big city like New York overwhelming. If you’re a maximizer, and you live in New York, you could spend months surveying your options for bedroom furniture or even wooden hangers. In a smaller city, like my hometown of Kansas City, even the most zealous maximizer can size up the available options pretty quickly.

In almost every category, I’m a satisficer, and until I read the Schwartz book, I felt guilty about the fact that often I make decisions without doing more research. For example, when I wanted to start a weight-training program, I didn’t study the options at all. A friend of mine told me she loved her trainer and regimen, and I just got the number and called. In law school, one friend interviewed with something like fifty law firms before she decided where she wanted to go as a summer associate; I think I interviewed with six. And we ended up at the same firm (which I found both reassuring and vindicating).

How about you? Are you a satisficer or a maximizer?


Want to get my free monthly newsletter? Sign up here. I post highlights from my blog, my podcast, my Facebook Page, plus bonus material. More than 300,000 people get it.


Gretchen Rubin is the author of the blockbuster New York Times bestsellers, Better Than BeforeThe Happiness Project, and Happier at Home. She writes about happiness and habit-formation at gretchenrubin.com. Follow her here by clicking the yellow FOLLOW button, on Twitter, @gretchenrubin, on Facebook, facebook.com/ GretchenRubin. Or listen to her popular podcast, Happier with Gretchen Rubin.

I am definitely a maximizer

回复
Marilyn Fall

Owner, Elder Care at Home VB

8 年

I am a satisfier and like it.

回复
Helen Lu

Test Manager,PMP, Certified Scrum Master, Certified FLMI, Certified SQA

8 年

very intereting concept of satisficer and maximizer. I am definitely Satisfiers :)and live with a maximizer :); not easy for both of us to reach agreement,even satisficer is saying “as you wish” and want to stop there, maximazer still expect you to continue to contibute, say,explore new feasibiities, contibute your ideas,and make a perfect plan together

David G. Kellogg

Owner / Developer at Mind Games by DGK

8 年

If you have properly defined what you are looking for, once there, STOP and move on to other things. Life is too short to waste time on What Ifs and Maybes.

回复
Sandra Johnson

Disabled at SOCIAL SECURITY SYSTEM

8 年

I'm a maximizer

回复

要查看或添加评论,请登录

Gretchen Rubin的更多文章

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了