Hacker News new | ask | show | jobs
by iknownothow 767 days ago
> People with ADHD operate on an “interest-based nervous system” so they’re motivated by urgency

Was the decision to have a 3 day trial instead of something longer have anything do with creating urgency and capitalizing on the impulsivity of people with ADHD?

I imagine people with ADHD are more likely to be excited by tools that help and they can often mistake the initial excitement with the tool actually helping manage their executive dysfunction. It's hard for me to see how anyone with ADHD will be able to judge this tool as being truly good for them within 3 days.

1 comments

It was mainly due to the token costs. With so many people trialing it, they add up fast. I think a one-use trial would be the best way to create urgency and capitalize on impulsivity (judging by my own impulsive purchases).

> I imagine people with ADHD are more likely to be excited by tools that help and they can often mistake the initial excitement with the tool actually helping manage their executive dysfunction.

This is a critical point I've been thinking about because I've done this many times with tools where I try it once, think it's going to solve my executive dysfunction, buy it impulsively, then proceed to stop using it, and then keep getting billed because I don't cancel it (ouch).