book how we decide
Ever closed a book on “how we decide,” only to freeze in the cereal aisle ten minutes later?
You’re not alone.
The gap between theory and real-life choosing is huge—unless you drag the theory into a tool that actually walks you through the mess.
That’s where StaMatrix comes in: a free, click-and-drag decision matrix that turns “I have no clue” into “here’s my ranked list, let’s go.”
Why a book on “how we decide” still isn’t enough
Books give you stories, dopamine hits, and the occasional framework.
What they don’t give you is a live workspace where you can dump your own options, weigh what matters to you, and watch the numbers change in real time.
StaMatrix is the missing worksheet that every “book how we decide” forgot to staple inside the back cover.
Turn pages into weights in 3 minutes
- Open StaMatrix and type your dilemma (“Which used car?” “Which city to move to?”).
- Let the AI scan your plain-English prompt and pre-fill the factors (price, mileage, vibe, commute, tacos-per-square-mile—whatever you muttered).
- Tweak the weights, add or delete options, and watch the scoreboard update. No spreadsheet degree required.
Common forks in the road (and how the matrix eats them)
Book how we decide vs. laptop on your couch
Scenario: you’re torn between three coding bootcamps.
The book says “listen to your gut after sleeping on it.”
StaMatrix says “list cost, job-placement rate, instructor rating, remote-friendliness, scholarship odds—then sleep on the ranked results.”
You’ll still trust your gut, but now it’s educated.
Book how we decide vs. Saturday at the dealership
Salesperson juggling APR, warranty, paint protection, and free coffee.
Instead of white-knuckling it, you open StaMatrix on your phone, plug the four cars in, score them on 14 things you care about (including “salesperson pushiness”), and the winner pops to the top before the coffee gets cold.
The psychology cheat-sheet every “book how we decide” loves—now automated
- Loss aversion: StaMatrix shows you what you’d lose by picking the flashy option that scores low on reliability.
- Choice overload: Instead of 27 columns in Excel, you see one clean score.
- Confirmation bias: You’re forced to score every factor for every option—no hiding from the ugly truths.
Step-by-step: from blank page to “I’m done”
Because nobody finishes a “book how we decide” and immediately knows what to do next, here’s the mini-playbook:
- Write your question in the AI assistant box (“Help me choose a masters program”).
- Scan the auto-generated factors; delete the silly ones, add the secret ones (e.g., “near surfing”).
- Use 1–5 stars or 1–100 points—whichever feels natural. StaMatrix normalizes either way.
- Hit “Matrix view” to see a side-by-side heat map. Red = disaster, green = dream.
- Share the link with your partner, best friend, or admissions counselor. Let them tinker. Consensus without 47 text threads.
Real user snippet (permission granted)
“I literally had ‘book how we decide’ on my nightstand for months. The night before my condo offer deadline I fed StaMatrix six buildings, 12 factors, 15 minutes. I slept instead of spiraling.”
—Jazmin, Toronto
FAQ that the book doesn’t answer
- Do I need to read a single page first?
- Nope. Type your conflict in plain English, let the AI pre-fill, learn as you go.
- Is my data safe?
- Tables live in your browser by default; export only when you want.
- What if I change my mind tomorrow?
- Re-open, adjust one weight, see the new winner in two clicks. Way faster than re-reading a 300-page book on “how we decide.”
Ready to close the book and open the matrix?
Knowledge feels great, but decisions feel better when they’re made.
Next time you catch yourself googling “book how we decide,” skip the shipping time.
Hop into StaMatrix, build your first table before the kettle boils, and walk away with the same dopamine hit—except this one comes with an actual answer.
Create my free decision matrix now