The inspiration for this project was my friends and I's extreme dissatisfaction with our experience navigating getting older and trying to balance a healthy lifestyle. We would start off with so much motivation and good intentions yet with little to show 3 months from our start date.
The truth of the matter is that we were thinking about our health all wrong. The issue wasn’t motivation or lack thereof, it was the lack of proper planning and commitment. So now the question has grown from ‘How do we get people to want to use a health tracking app?’ to ‘How might we reimagine the whole experience of building healthy habits?’ Not as a quick-fix solution but as a daily commitment to getting 1% better. There are no shortcuts, but a ‘Ritualist’ is cool with that and makes it enjoyable regardless of the time commitment.
Throughout the discovery/research phase, my assumption was that people would need help tracking their habits (which is still true), however, the true need for this set of users tested was actually guidance on building habits and keeping up with these habits daily. An overwhelming 35% found consistency and 23% found anxiety and depression being their hindrance to living a healthy lifestyle. This is where the idea of habit building and goal setting has been confirmed to be the solution to these pain points. Once a habit is created in the app you must have it connected to a goal so that they are in sync and will update you periodically to ensure you are keeping up with the pace you set for yourself.
Taking into account various user interview feedback and survey results, the biggest frustration around building healthy habits is the lack of consistency. The Ritualist app provides a start but by any means will not solve personal commitment issues.
If by chance the user will only be engaging through their Apple Watch, they can opt-in to a daily check-in which entails gauging their mood and reflecting on curated prompts to get a better understanding of their mood for the day and give you a bit of mental clarity. With that being the first task of the day you are already 1% healthier than before. Making it that much easier to tackle the harder tasks such as working out or meal prepping.
This idea is called habit stacking which was learned from Atomic Habits by James Clear. The concept is that one small task can lead to you completing a slightly harder task and then another soon after. These all relate to accomplishing a goal in small chunks over a longer period rather than a one-and-done approach which is not sustainable.
Overall, I believe that this is only scratching the surface of all that I’d like to see in the health and wellness industry.
To start, I believe that information can and should be accessible and easily digestible for people of diverse backgrounds in the US. Learning about your personal health and wellness shouldn't be gate-kept for medical practitioners but should be available for everyone. In conclusion, more apps like this in the market will democratize access to credible health and habit-building information for all. Not just for those who can afford to have a life coach and dietician at their disposal.