What is Cue?
A cue is the trigger that prompts a behavior — an external or internal signal that starts a habit or action. It’s the first step in the habit loop (cue → routine → reward).
In behaviour-change and productivity contexts, a cue is any stimulus that reliably signals it’s time to do something. Cues can be external (a time of day, a location, a notification sound, seeing your running shoes) or internal (a feeling of boredom, stress, or hunger). When paired repeatedly with a routine and a perceived reward, a cue helps make the routine automatic and reduces the need for conscious decision-making.
Usage example
Practical application
Designing or noticing useful cues helps you turn desirable actions into automatic habits, cutting down decision fatigue and increasing consistency. For busy people and neurodivergent individuals, explicit cues — like placing a notebook next to your bed or using a visual object on your desk — can scaffold routines when executive bandwidth is low. Digital tools that capture your intentions and schedule reminders can also turn fleeting thoughts into reliable cues to act; for example, voice-first task managers can record what you plan to do and surface it at the right cue so you don’t have to remember everything mentally.
FAQ
How is a cue different from a reminder?
A cue is any trigger that naturally or deliberately prompts a behavior; a reminder is a deliberate, often artificial cue (like an alarm or notification) created to prompt action. Reminders are one type of cue, but cues also include environment, time, emotions, and preceding actions.
How do I identify what cue is driving a behaviour I want to change?
Observe what immediately precedes the behaviour for several repetitions: time of day, location, people present, preceding action, or your internal state. Keeping a quick log for a week helps reveal patterns and the most reliable trigger to target.
Can internal states like stress be effective cues?
Yes. Internal cues such as stress, boredom or tiredness often trigger habitual responses (e.g., snacking or doom-scrolling). These can be harder to change because they’re less visible; strategies include substituting a healthier routine when the feeling arises or creating external cues that interrupt the automatic response.
How long until a cue reliably forms a new habit?
Related blog posts
Ibu Uche Ezinụlọ: Ụdị Olu Dị mfe Iji Kesaa Ọrụ Uche n'ụlọ
Anyị na-ebu ihe n’isi anyị nke na-agaghị abụrịrị ndepụta. Nhazi oge, echiche onyinye, nri ehihie nke ụlọ akwụkwọ, na mbọ...
Ọnọdụ Flow n’Ụsọ: Ịkwụ Anya Gị N’Ụbọchị Ọrụ Kpụpụtara
Ọ bụrụ na nke a na-ada gị, ị bụghị naanị gị. Ndụ ọrụ nke oge a na-eto na ihe a na-akpọ mgbanwe kontextị, na mgbanwe ọ bụl...
Ụdị Omume Ntakịrị: Ịwulite Ụzọ Ọrụ Nke Na-adịrịgide N’Ụkpụrụ Sayensị Nudge
Anọwo m na-eche na mgbanwe nke eziokwu chọrọ nnukwu ngosipụta na nkwekọrịta kwa ụbọchị. A na m amalite izu ahụ na mkpebi...
Ịhicha Dijital: Ịmepụta Nri Ozi Maka Idobe Uche Dịgide
Nkwupụta ozi kwesịrị ime ka anyị nwee ozi ma jikọta anyị. Kama ha, ha aghọwo nne na nna nke ịrụ ọrụ na-adị mfe. N’isiokwu...
Mmeri nta, Ọsọ ukwu: Ihe sayensị nke ịme emume na ọrụ ọ bụla
Ụfọdụ n’ime anyị enweghịkwa agba champagne mgbe anyị zara arịrịọ ụgwọ, mana ụbụrụ na-achọ mgbaàmà na-ekwu “ọma ọrụ.” N'en...