Does Adding a Second Option Make Action Easier?
Does Adding a Second Option Make Action Easier? The second option can turn hesitation into desire—or turn motion into math. Framing the Question Does adding a second option make action easier, or just make evaluation heavier? It depends on whether the second option changes the person’s mental question in a useful way. One option often asks, “Do I want this?” A second option can shift the question to, “Which one do I want?” That small shift matters in sales, leadership, design, teaching, and everyday decision-making. The Direct Answer Adding a second option makes action easier when it turns a yes-or-no decision into a useful comparison. One vending machine asks: “Do I want a drink?” Two vending machines ask: “Do I want this drink or that drink?” That second question pulls the person into comparison. Now they are thinking about taste, brand, price, habit, mood, or preference. The decision is no longer only about whether to buy. It becomes about which version of buying fits. But the secon...