The 3 Science-Backed Strategies That Can Help You Achieve Your Post-Pandemic Goals

The internal obstacles that commonly prevent change—the tendency to give into temptation, to be lazy, to be forgetful, to experience self-doubt, and so on—are surmountable. But just as different maladies respond to different treatments, so too do different barriers to change. We can’t just throw any solution at them and expect great results. We need the right one.

May 6, 2021
- TIME

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A Return to the Office Is a Great Chance to Make a Fresh Start

In her new book, How to Change: The Science of Getting From Where You Are to Where You Want to Be, Katy Milkman, a professor at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School, talks about strategies for overcoming obstacles. Here are edited excerpts from a conversation about how workers and bosses can adopt better habits as they return to the office.

May 4, 2021
- Bloomberg Businessweek

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Seven More Ways to Fool Yourself Into Good Financial Decisions

Newbies investing money for the first time and people on tight budgets can be illogical about money, but so can those with loads of cash in the bank. “You aren’t insulated from human nature because of a high salary,” says Katy Milkman, a professor at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School and author of the forthcoming How to Change: The Science of Getting From Where You Are to Where You Want to Be. You are, however, able to use behavioral economics to make better financial decisions.

March 9, 2021
- Bloomberg Businessweek

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Seven Ways to Trick Yourself Into Making Sound Financial Choices

People often assess their lives and make new commitments on their birthdays, so it’s a “beautiful opportunity” to make changes that are short-term annoying but long-term beneficial, says Katy Milkman, a professor at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School and author of the forthcoming How to Change: The Science of Getting From Where You Are to Where You Want to Be.

March 2, 2021
- Bloomberg Businessweek

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I Teach a Course on Happiness at Yale: This Is How to Make the Most of Your Resolutions

University of Pennsylvania psychologist Katy Milkman and others have shown that people are more driven to tackle new goals at shared temporal breaks than at random times of the year; something she calls the “fresh start effect.” Whether it’s a birthday, the first day of school or even a Monday morning, fresh start moments give us a boost of motivation by focusing our attention on the big picture and what we really want out of life. They make us feel less weighed down by past mistakes, as if we’ve been given a blank slate.

January 8, 2021
-The Guardian

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The Best Evidence for How to Overcome COVID Vaccine Fears

Even among the willing, it will take a concerted effort by public health officials to ensure that good intentions translate into action. Whether it is getting out to vote or showing up for a vaccination, one third to two thirds of people who say they will do something wind up flaking out, says Katy Milkman, co-director of the Behavior Change for Good Initiative at the University of Pennsylvania, where she researches ways to close this “intention-action gap.”

January 7, 2021
-Scientific American

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Your 2021 Budget: Plan Ahead, but Not Too Far Ahead

Instead of setting a budget for the year, or even for the season, try structuring your spending and saving plan on a much smaller scale. This approach has several key advantages: You’re able to better monitor your cash flow, pivot plans with greater ease and reclaim some of the “fresh start” energy as the new year arrives.

December 29, 2020
-The Wall Street Journal

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This Year, Try Downsizing Your Resolutions

If you have several types of goals, choose one that resonates with you the most, the experts said. (Maybe choose two if you’re feeling ambitious.) Having just one goal and a plan for achieving it is more important than having lots of vague goals, they said. Next, write everything down. This will not only help you think through your goals, but also help make them more memorable, said Katy Milkman, a behavioral scientist and professor at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania, and the author of How to Change, a forthcoming book on the science of achieving goals.

December 29, 2020
-The New York Times

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Our Favorite Advice of 2020

At 72 and with high blood pressure, John is worried he won’t be in the best shape to travel when this is all over. So behavioral economist Katy Milkman introduces him to a key strategy for losing weight called “temptation bundling.” The idea is simple: Pair something you love—like juicy audio romance novels or, say, your favorite advice podcast—with a workout. The trick is to listen to that audiobook or podcast only when you exercise, so that you actually start looking forward to the workout.

December 29, 2020
-Slate

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