Why more is less
You have 500 streaming options. Why can't you find anything to watch? You spend 20 minutes scrolling, then give up and re-watch The Office.
Psychologist Barry Schwartz discovered that more choices don't make us happierβ they paralyze us. The famous "jam study" showed that offering 24 jams led to 10x fewer purchases than offering just 6.
Freedom of choice is supposed to be liberating. Instead, it's exhausting.
Select ONE jam to "purchase." We're tracking how long it takes and how stressed you feel.
More options attracted more interest (60% vs 40% stopped), but 10x fewer people actually bought. Choice paralysis is real.
Netflix has 15,000+ titles. The average user spends 18 minutes browsing before watching... or giving up.
Schwartz found that maximizers (who seek the BEST option) are less happy than satisficers (who accept "good enough").
1. When shopping for clothes, I:
2. When choosing a restaurant:
3. After making a purchase, I:
4. When a new, better option appears:
Netflix, Hulu, Disney+, HBO Max... 60,000+ titles combined. Users spend more time browsing than watching. Solution? "Top 10" and "Because you watched..." reduce cognitive load.
Patients given too many treatment options often experience decision paralysis, delaying critical care. Sometimes "doctor recommends" is the kindest option.
Iyengar found maximizers landed jobs with 20% higher salariesβbut felt MORE stressed, anxious, and regretful than satisficers who earned less.
5 million apps available. "Editor's Choice" and curated lists exist because unlimited choice leads to abandonment, not downloads.
The average supermarket stocks 40,000+ items. Trader Joe's succeeds with ~4,000βcustomers report less stress and faster shopping.
Infinite potential matches create "grass is greener" syndrome. Users swipe endlessly but form fewer meaningful connections than those with limited options.
Researchers set up a jam-tasting booth in an upscale grocery store. On some days, 24 varieties were displayed; on others, only 6. Customers could taste any jams and received a $1 coupon.
"The extensive-choice condition attracted more initial interest... but consumers were subsequently much more likely to purchase jam if they had encountered the limited-choice display." β Iyengar & Lepper, Journal of Personality and Social Psychology (2000)
Barry Schwartz identified two decision-making styles:
Counterintuitively, maximizers often make objectively better choices but feel worse about them.
A 2010 meta-analysis by Benjamin Scheibehenne found mixed results when attempting to replicate the jam study. The average effect was near zeroβbut with high variability.
This suggests choice overload isn't universalβit depends on expertise, preference uncertainty, and how choices are organized. The effect is real, but context-dependent.