Recognize which decisions to defer or delegate

Not every choice deserves your cognitive best — identify which ones merit serious deliberation.

Why it works

Decision fatigue degrades choice quality across all decisions made in sequence. Conserving cognitive resources by delegating or deferring low-stakes decisions protects the quality of high-stakes ones. The critical insight is that delegation is not avoidance — it is strategic prioritization of where deliberate attention has the highest return.

How to do it

  1. Categorize pending decisions by reversibility and stakes: high-stakes irreversible = deliberate carefully; low-stakes reversible = decide fast or delegate.
  2. Build defaults for recurring low-stakes decisions (a weekly meal template, a standard morning order) so they consume no fresh deliberation.
  3. Identify one category per week where you can delegate selection entirely to a trusted person or process.

Evidence

Ego-depletion research found that decision quality degrades after a series of choices, consistent with treating deliberate attention as a limited resource. Note: the ego-depletion effect has had replication difficulties; the directional finding remains influential but the mechanism is contested. (observational)

The ego-depletion paradigm has not fully replicated in large pre-registered studies. Subjective experience of decision fatigue is real and self-reported; the neurological substrate is less settled.

Sources

  • Baumeister et al. (1998), "Ego depletion," Journal of Personality and Social Psychology — see also replication critiques

Common mistake

Applying high deliberation to every decision equally, which depletes cognitive resources before the decisions that actually matter.

Practice this with IX Coach

IX Coach categorizes the decisions you face by their actual stakes and helps you build defaults for the low-stakes ones so you arrive at important choices with full attention.

Start with IX Coach

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