Or generally, thinking about things, and removing trivial inconveniences. Are people more likely to exercise during a break, if you bring them some weights?
Ah, great point. That makes a lot of sense. I was thinking about things that are known to be important like exercise and sleep but wasn’t really seeing ways to help people with that but trivial inconveniences seem like a problem that people have and is worth solving. I’d think the first step would be either a) looking at existing research/findings for what these trivial inconveniences are likely to be or maybe b) user interviews.
Yeah, the important thing, if he was approached and refused, would be to know why. Then maybe we can do something about it, and maybe we can’t.
Yes, absolutely. It reminds me a little bit of Salesforce. Have a list of leads; talk to them; or the ones that don’t work out add notes discussing why; over time go through the notes and look for any learnings or insights. (I’m not actually sure if salespeople do this currently.)
Ah, great point. That makes a lot of sense. I was thinking about things that are known to be important like exercise and sleep but wasn’t really seeing ways to help people with that but trivial inconveniences seem like a problem that people have and is worth solving. I’d think the first step would be either a) looking at existing research/findings for what these trivial inconveniences are likely to be or maybe b) user interviews.
Yes, absolutely. It reminds me a little bit of Salesforce. Have a list of leads; talk to them; or the ones that don’t work out add notes discussing why; over time go through the notes and look for any learnings or insights. (I’m not actually sure if salespeople do this currently.)