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Guide12th August 2024

Using behaviour change to make more user-focused content

How to use behaviour change models and interventions in content strategy and content design.
Content design and creationContent strategy

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Content last reviewed April 2026

Defining behaviour change

When people talk about ‘behaviour change’ they’re usually referencing two things at once:

  1. Interventions to try and change behaviour
  2. The models that inform those interventions.

Behaviour change can focus on an individual, a group of people, or society. The change might be to:

The term is often used in relation to public health, psychology, education, and development. For example, a public health campaign might use behaviour change interventions to get people to stop smoking, walk more, or recycle. It’s used in relation to UX and marketing too, as people look for evidence-based ways to approach their work. For example, a price comparison brand might use ideas from behavioural science to encourage people to compare car insurance prices, rather than just auto-renewing.

Based on that last example, you might be thinking ‘well that’s just marketing’. But what sets a behaviour change-informed approach apart is the focus on understanding what levers to pull to influence people’s behaviour — the model that informs the intervention.

Insight from psychology and social sciences underpins behaviour change interventions. The models help us understand the different things that influence human behaviour – like beliefs, social influences, environmental factors, capabilities, and more. With that insight, you can better target and shape your interventions.

Content and behaviour change: user-focused BFFs

Content strategy and content design both have a big focus on the user, and creating content that meets their needs. We use user insight, research, and testing to help us plan and create the right content and make sure it reaches them in the right place and at the right time.

Behaviour change models can add a valuable extra layer to the work we’re already doing in understanding user needs. They can help us to:

And of course, all of that can help us to meet our goals and targets, whether we’ve been charged with generating sales or donations, creating awareness, providing education, or something else.

AIM: a behaviour change framework for content

Natalie Shaw’s article Designing content for behavioural change sparked my interest in behaviour change and content. I found her framework really useful, and it inspired me to go away and do more research.

I wanted to distil some of the things I found most useful and relevant to content from what I learnt. So I developed a simple behaviour change-based framework to use for content. I use this model to help me structure insight and research into a format that I can keep on hand as I plan and create the content.

The model is AIM:

Attention

Before you can influence someone’s behaviour, you need to get their attention. To do this, you need to know what people are thinking, feeling, and doing in relation to the topic. For this part of my behaviour change model, I make sure I’m clear on:

Capturing attention needs a multi-channel approach, and should use both push and pull content. You have to meet people where they are.

Information

Once you have the person’s attention, it’s time to give them the information they need to change their behaviour. As part of this, you should consider:

These factors will influence what information you provide, and where and how you provide it.

Motivation

The final part of the framework is motivation. This means encouraging the user to take action by appealing to their values and emotions, and showing them the benefits. Motivation can be:

Behaviour change interventions in content

While the AIM model can help you plan content, behaviour change interventions can help you to write and design it.

Behaviour change interventions are techniques you can use to prompt, support, educate, and motivate people.

Again, we can learn from psychology and social sciences. Some behaviour change models include behaviour change interventions, too. One of the sources I’ve found most useful is this taxonomy of behaviour change from the NHS (PDF).

If you’re working for a charity, nonprofit, government agency, or another similar kind of organisation, your stakeholders or subject matter experts are likely to use behaviour change interventions in their work. If that’s the case, speaking to these people will be an incredible source of insight for you. For example, when I worked on a content design project to help people who wanted to stop smoking, the smoking cessation nurses I interviewed had a wealth of evidence-based interventions that they used with clients. We found that lots of these could be reflected or reproduced in digital content.

Here are some useful behaviour change interventions to keep in mind. I’ve used stopping smoking as an example, to illustrate how they might work in practice:

  1. Instructions, processes, methods: help someone learn how to do something. For example: a guide to different nicotine replacement products and their pros and cons.
  2. Explanations: help someone understand possible reasons for an unwanted behaviour. For example: listing common triggers/habit loops that go along with smoking.
  3. Consequences: explain things that happen as a result of a behaviour, positive and negative, personal, social or environmental. For example: talking about the impact of second-hand smoke on friends and family.
  4. Social approval: remind someone of the approval they’ll get from the good behaviour. For example: talking about things like how happy and proud friends and family will feel, or no longer smelling like smoke.
  5. Comparisons/modelling: provide a comparison of different behaviours, or model what the positive behaviour looks like. For example: giving people a list of ways to refuse an invite to go out for a cigarette, or providing case studies from people who have quit.
  6. Prompts, cues, and triggers: help people understand and plan for providing positive prompts and avoiding negative triggers. For example, suggesting setting a reminder on their phone to use their nicotine lozenge, or listing common smoking triggers.
  7. Goal/commitment setting: prompt the user to set a goal or make a commitment. For example: prompting someone to sit down and really think about their goals in stopping smoking.
  8. Problem solving: prompting the user to analyse their behaviour and come up with solutions. For example: setting up an exercise for people to identify their habits and patterns with smoking and come up with ways to disrupt them.
  9. Feedback and monitoring: prompting the user to monitor their behaviour and feelings about it, keep records, journal, etc to keep track, but also to monitor positive changes. For example: suggesting people do a weekly review and explore what went well, what the challenges were, and notice any positive outcomes.
  10. Self-belief: reinforce self-belief and help someone see that they can change the behaviour. For example: include messaging to help the person believe that they can quit.

Ethical considerations with behaviour change

Behaviour change — like most things — can be used in a negative, manipulative way that harms users rather than helping them.

There’s a lot of justified concern about how behavioural science is being used to manipulate users in the digital design world. Harry Brignull’s work on deceptive patterns is a great resource for understanding what this can look like. Some key patterns that he’s identified include:

Find out more and buy the book on the Deceptive Patterns website.

Another risk is promoting personal responsibility when structural change is what’s needed. For example, shaming the public with carbon footprint calculators while oil companies destroy the planet with impunity.

But as long as your general approach is to respect your users, and treat them as active citizens rather than passive consumers, using behaviour change models doesn’t have to be manipulative. It should be a way to be more empathetic, more inclusive, and ultimately, more user-focused.

Reading list

Loosely related, but very interesting: