Use The Science of Behavioral Design To Bring Out The Best In Yourself!
Experts in Behavior Science have made some exciting discoveries and inroads in human behavior.
Now, there are new tools to use to design your behavior to continuously shape and reshape all that your presence offers to the world.
Would you like to learn how to change habitual behaviors for the better? Scientific discoveries by leading experts in human behavior have enabled people to achieve success in forming and stopping behaviors, even after prior failures.
This article is part one of two in a new mini-series. Read on to find out how you can successfully manage your own behavior and make changes for the better.
Willpower Doesn’t Work
Most of us have walked away from more than a few unsuccessful efforts to make change using our willpower. Then, we blame ourselves. But, failure to manage our behavioral habits through willpower is not our fault. Willpower is not an effective tool for lasting change.
This article describes a proven-effective approach and associated tools. It throws light on human behavior, making it easier to understand both your own behavior and that of others. With it, you’ll be equipped to drive and sustain desired personal change.
The B.J. Fogg Model: Your Proven-Effective Approach
The Behavior Model by B.J. Fogg – Source: YouTube by Optimize Nurse – LINK:?https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zqzh7_Zc3jM
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Much of the behavior we do every day is routine and automatic. For example: Have you ever left home on a day off and, without thinking about it, gone in the direction of your workplace, even though that isn’t where you intended to go? That’s because you have a habit of taking your route to work when you leave home. It has become automatic. You do it without thinking about it. We all have lots of habits.
What Drives Behavior
Science has identified three factors that drive behavior:
When these three factors converge at the same moment, behavior results. The Fogg model is your map to managing your own behavior. Using it, you can establish desired, new habits and stop doing existing, undesired habits much more easily and successfully than the traditional approach of relying on willpower. Following is an overview of the science behind the model.
Looking at the graphic, you see the following:
Each of these two factors can range anywhere between the High and Low points.
Now, let’s look at the?Action Line, the curved, orange line. The Action Line shows how Motivation and Ability jointly determine behavior.
While both Motivation and Ability are both required, it’s their combined strength that determines whether a behavior lands to the left or the right of the Action Line.
If one dimension is Low and the other is High enough, the behavior can still land to the right of the Action Line. The amount you have of one affects the amount you need of the other. You can assess the overall strength of these two factors by making a judgment call or by assigning numeric values and taking an average. Your method of measuring them is up to you.
You Can Strengthen Your Motivation and Ability
Strengthening Motivation
The more motivation you have to do something, the more likely it is that you’ll do it.
Think of a behavioral habit you have desire (motivation) to adopt. Assess your desire from Low to High. How strong is it? Is your desire to do a behavior stronger than your reasons not to do it?
You can find ways to strengthen your desire, in three simple steps. Identify and write down the following:
Strengthening Ability
The harder a behavior is to do, the less likely you will do it. The key here is to make the behavior easy, even ridiculously easy to do. You may need to break it down into tiny actions so that you’ll be able to get yourself to do it.
Think about what you’ll need in order to do the behavior. Needs often include time, money, physical effort, mental effort and/or existing routines. Assess how hard or easy it is to do the behavior.
To find ways you can make it easier for you to do the behavior, identify and write down the following:
Once you’ve identified a new behavior/habit you’d like to form and you’ve strengthened your Motivation and Ability to do it, use the model to ensure the behavior is over the Action Line. Then, you will be able to get yourself to do it. You’re ready to begin.
Choose An Anchor
Much of the behavior we do every day is routine and automatic. For example: Have you ever left home on a day off and, without thinking about it, gone in the direction of your workplace, even though that isn’t where you intended to go? That’s because you have a habit of taking your route to work when you leave home. It has become automatic. You do it without thinking about it. We all have lots of habits.
We all have routines, that consist of a string of little habits strung together. For example, I have a work-day morning routine that I employ when I wake up. There are seven little habits and I do them in the same order every day:
To form a new habit, we need to fit it into an existing routine, where it makes the most sense to do. You can see an example of that in the morning routine above — the vacuuming! The vacuuming has been locked into my routine for several years.
The routine we add our new behavior into is called an Anchor Behavior. The anchor behavior is well established as a fixed part of every day. It’s guaranteed to happen. It works for adding a new behavior you want to become a habit.
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Once you identify your anchor behavior, write down, in order, the steps of that habit or routine. Identify the optimum place to slide in your new behavior and write it in.
Write Your Recipe
Sample Recipe Template
Once you’ve identified the anchor for your new behavior, A tool called a?Recipe?comes into play to guide you in forming a new habit. Following are the ingredients:
The written recipe for the routine sample provided under "Choose An Anchor" looks like this:
After I: Enjoy morning greetings with the dog
I will: Vacuum the chosen floor
Then I'll: Do a little victory dance and say, "Yay, me!"
Apply Your Recipe
Your Routines Provide A Selection of Anchor Behaviors
Think about all of the routines or habits you do each day. Following are some examples, to help you to think about it.
Remember: There's a special value in having routines or habits that are so well-locked into each day: These can serve you well as Anchor Behaviors for new behaviors you want to do, because the Anchors are a certainty in your day. You can use any action in an Anchor routine as a Prompt for a new behavior. For this to work, it needs to make sense to you for the new behavior to be done right after you complete the last action in the Anchor.
Example:
Refer to the morning routine I have set up. I had originally tried to set up a room for vacuuming, including removing clutter and things I keep on the floor such as waste baskets or end tables, but this didn't work. It was too hard to do, because I didn't want to spend the time required to do the room set up, the vacuuming, and putting everything back in place, as part of my morning routine.
I had to be flexible and a little creative. To make it easier, I put the set-up of the room into an evening routine. It had its own recipe card and steps. It works beautifully.
Your Next Steps
It's important to gain experience in managing behavioral habits by mastering the addition of several new behaviors into your day-to-day life. This builds your skills in managing behavior change. It builds your self-confidence in your capability to succeed in managing your behavior. I strengthens the credibility and trust you have in your reliability to follow through on commitments to yourself. It demonstrates to others that you do what you say you'll do.
Mastering this skill means introducing and sustaining a desired new habit. You'll know it's locked in when you do it automatically, without first thinking about it, as an automatic part of your routine.
Now, it's your turn! Is there a behavior -- something you already know how to do, but that you haven't been able to get yourself to do as a routine or habit? Now's your chance to make it happen.
Choose a behavior you want to become habitual.
It could be something you recently learned about in a training program. It could be something you read about in a book or article. Maybe you heard it in a podcast. It could be something you saw done by someone else. It could also be something you have had in mind for a while. The only requirements are:
Consider keeping your recipes in a file or box where they will be in your sight, for instance on the kitchen counter. You might prefer another place, or perhaps you'd like to add a monthly check-sheet to track your success!
Support Ideas
What's Next?
Our next article focuses on stopping a behavioral habit.
Please share your opinions, suggestions and comments.
Recommended Reading & Sources
Tiny Habits by B.J. Fogg, Copyright 2020 by B.J. Fogg, Published by Mariner Books
The 15 Minute Rule, by Caroline Buchanan, Published in Great Britain by Robinson, 2012
Atomic Habits, by James Clear, Copyright 2018 by James Clear, Published by Penguin Random House
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