Keep check-ins short — consistency beats comprehensiveness
A 20-minute check-in every week beats a 3-hour one every quarter.
Why it works
Comprehensive check-ins that cover everything are cognitively and emotionally expensive; the bar to initiate them is high, and they often expand to fill the time available, becoming draining rather than connecting. Short, regular check-ins have a lower initiation threshold, surface small issues before they need a long conversation, and create an ongoing maintenance rhythm rather than periodic crisis management. The regularity of the practice is the active ingredient — not the depth of any single session.
How to do it
- Set a time limit before you begin: 20–30 minutes maximum.
- Agree that anything that needs more than 10 minutes gets its own scheduled conversation.
- Stick to the timer even if the conversation feels unfinished — the next check-in is in seven days.
- If a check-in frequently runs long, that is information: something is accumulating that needs its own dedicated time.
Evidence
Consistency and regularity of relationship maintenance behaviors is more predictive of relationship quality than the intensity of occasional grand gestures — consistent with habit formation research showing that frequency and low initiation cost drive maintenance. (mechanistic)
Mechanistic extrapolation from habit research and maintenance behavior research; optimal duration for relationship check-ins has not been directly studied.
Common mistake
Treating a missed check-in as an opportunity to do two weeks’ worth in one sitting — compressed check-ins tend to exhaust rather than connect, and the weight of backlog makes initiation harder the following week.
Practice this with IX Coach
IX Coach structures a focused 20-minute check-in with specific agenda items, keeping the conversation on track and flagging when something needs a dedicated session rather than consuming the check-in time.
7 days free, then $40/month (~$1.30/day).