Designing for Behavior Change

By Stephen Wendel
ASIN#: B0CBQTSX5J

We’ve all been there: you launch a world-class leadership program, the feedback scores are off the charts, and yet… six months later, nothing has changed on the ground.

In Designing for Behavior Change, Stephen Wendel tackles the "Intention-Action Gap" head-on. This isn't a book about the psychology of why people want to change; it’s a rigorous, practical manual on how to design environments that make change inevitable. For ELE members, this represents a shift from being "content providers" to "architects of behavior."


The Blueprint: Understanding the CREATE Model

Wendel moves beyond vague theories of habit-building and introduces the CREATE framework—a mental checklist for any leader trying to influence how their team operates. To drive a specific action, an individual must go through these stages:

  • Cue: Is there a clear trigger that tells the person it’s time to act?
  • Reaction: What is their immediate, intuitive response to that trigger?
  • Evaluation: Do they consciously see the value in performing the action?
  • Ability: Is the action actually easy to do, or is there too much "friction"?
  • Timing: Is the person being asked to act at the exact moment they are able to?
  • Experience: Does the action feel rewarding enough to make them want to do it again?

The Core Insight: Most corporate training focuses heavily on "Evaluation" (convincing people it matters), while neglecting "Ability" and "Cues" (making it easy and obvious).


Why It Matters for the ELE Community

As senior leaders in HR and Talent, your product isn't just "training"—it’s transformation. Wendel’s approach is relevant to ELE members for three specific reasons:

  • Moving Beyond Motivation: We often blame "lack of engagement" for failed initiatives. This book argues that if an employee isn't changing, the problem is likely in the system design, not the employee's willpower.
  • Data-Driven Design: Wendel provides a structured way to measure and iterate on behavioral outcomes, turning "soft" HR initiatives into hard, measurable results.
  • Practical Lab Alignment: This aligns perfectly with ELE’s "Action Lab" philosophy. It gives us a shared language to deconstruct complex organizational challenges and rebuild them into seamless employee experiences.
Designing for the future of work requires us to move past mere information delivery and toward intentional habit architecture. By applying these behavior design principles, we can shift the needle on culture and performance in a way that is both measurable and sustainable. It’s time to stop asking if our people are "learning" and start asking if our design is making it easy for them to succeed.
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