Justin Kan

Nov 11, 2016
Set good defaults
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January 18, 2013

Setting up good default behavior is very important. In fact, most people never change the default settings for the things they use. For software designers, this means investing time thinking about what you want to happen if nothing changes. For example, this is why Google pays to be the default search in mobile OSes and browsers, and why Google invested so heavily in a mobile OS (Android) where they would automatically be the default search: most users will never change their browser to default to another search engine.

At Exec, we spend time thinking about default behavior. Here’s one simple example; this is the first step of our cleaning booking process.

This is what it looks like the first time:

This is what it looks like after you’ve used us once:

The difference is pretty obvious: the second time you use the service, we default to the home you’ve already cleaned. Most people don’t have multiple places they want cleaned, and so we save an extra 10 seconds for the vast majority of our users.

At a meta level, I’ve spent some time thinking about what things make good defaults for a company.

One of the things that almost every company in Silicon Valley seems to buy into is providing lunch (and often dinner). Having meals show up every day around noon means that team members are much more likely to have the default lunch at the office with their coworkers. In turn, this behavior has benefits like serendipitous discovery and collaboration, increased group cohesion, and cost and time savings for the employees and company.

Recently, along with a few coworkers, I’ve replaced my sitting desk with a treadmill desk to try to stay healthier.

I discovered pretty quickly that walking 8 miles a day (at 1 mph) while working wasn’t something I was going to do. However, the thing I appreciate the most about having a treadmill desk is that even if I don’t turn it on once during a day it still functions by default as a standing desk, which is already way better for you than sitting!

What other possible default behaviors can you change in your work environment?

If you are reading this from the Bay Area, consider checking out our San Francisco house cleaning service for yourself.



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