Question
How do I practice scaling behavioral experiments?
Quick Answer
Identify one small behavioral experiment you have run in the past six months that produced a clear positive result. Write down the exact conditions under which it succeeded: duration, scope, context, triggers, and any constraints that made it manageable. Now design three progressive expansions —.
The most direct way to practice scaling behavioral experiments is through a focused exercise: Identify one small behavioral experiment you have run in the past six months that produced a clear positive result. Write down the exact conditions under which it succeeded: duration, scope, context, triggers, and any constraints that made it manageable. Now design three progressive expansions — each one increasing the scope by roughly 50 percent along one dimension (duration, frequency, number of domains, or number of people involved). For each expansion, write a specific hypothesis about what you expect to happen and a specific observation you will make to test it. Run the first expansion this week and record whether the gains held, diminished, or changed character at the new scale.
Common pitfall: Treating a successful small experiment as proof that the behavior works at any scale, then jumping straight to the full-sized version without intermediate steps. This is the most common scaling failure because success generates enthusiasm, and enthusiasm overrides the experimental discipline that produced the success in the first place. The result is a fragile, oversized commitment that collapses under conditions the small experiment never tested — and you conclude the behavior 'doesn't really work' when the actual problem was the scaling strategy.
This practice connects to Phase 56 (Behavioral Experimentation) — building it as a repeatable habit compounds over time.
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