Minimal scale balancing two abstract investment option tokens
Comparing investing options can feel like you’re supposed to read everything: fund pages, Reddit threads, fee tables, tax rules, market predictions. The trick is to compare in a way that’s structured enough to be fair, but small enough to finish.

Here’s a workflow playbook you can run on Android in Chrome in about 30 minutes.

You’ll end with one clear next step (even if it’s “do nothing yet, but on purpose”).

Step 1 (3 minutes): Write the decision in one sentence

Overthinking often happens because you’re comparing things that aren’t the same decision.

In Chrome, open a note (or a blank doc) and write:

  • I am choosing between [Option A] and [Option B] (and optionally [Option C]).
  • For the goal of [retirement / house down payment / general long-term growth / learning].
  • With a time horizon of [under 3 years / 3–10 years / 10+ years].

That’s it. No forecasts.

Step 2 (5 minutes): Set two “guardrails” so you stop adding options

Abstract guardrails icon containing a few option shapes
If you don’t set limits, your brain will keep “just checking one more” option.

Pick two guardrails:

  • Option cap: I will compare a maximum of 3 options today.
  • Time cap: I will decide (or pause with a plan) in 30 minutes.
  • Source cap: I will use official pages + one neutral explainer (not 12 hot takes).
  • Complexity cap: If an option needs a 20-minute video to understand, it’s not today’s option.

Guardrails aren’t about being lazy—they’re about making the comparison finishable.

Step 3 (7 minutes): Reduce each option to a “label card”

This step prevents you from comparing vibes instead of facts.

For each option, create a tiny card (copy/paste into your note):

  • What it is: (ETF, index fund, target-date fund, robo-advisor, brokerage account type)
  • What you control: (contribution amount, asset mix if applicable, when you buy/sell)
  • Main cost: (expense ratio / advisory fee / account fee)
  • Main risk: (market risk, concentration risk, interest rate risk, behavior risk)
  • When it “works”: (long holding periods, regular contributions, etc.)

One short card per option forces clarity.

Step 4 (8 minutes): Use a simple scorecard (weights included)

Minimal clipboard checklist icon representing a comparison scorecard
You don’t need a perfect model. You need a consistent one.

Score each category 1–5 (5 is best). Then multiply by the weight.

  • Fit to time horizon (x3): Does this match when you’ll need the money?
  • Total costs (x3): Are ongoing fees low and easy to understand?
  • Diversification (x2): Is it spread out, or reliant on a narrow bet?
  • Simplicity (x2): Can you explain it to “future you” in 30 seconds?
  • Behavior friendliness (x2): Will this reduce tinkering and panic-selling?
  • Tax/account match (x1): Is it reasonable for the account you’ll use?

Notice what’s not on the list: “recent performance” and “what people are excited about.” Those are common overthinking traps.

Step 5 (5 minutes): Check two “deal-breakers” before you pick

High scores don’t matter if there’s a hidden problem for your situation.

  • Liquidity / lockups: Can you access the money when you need it (and what are the penalties)?
  • Risk mismatch: Would a 30–50% drop cause you to abandon the plan?

If either deal-breaker is a “no,” that option doesn’t advance today.

Step 6 (2 minutes): Make a “good enough” decision and define the next action

Abstract forked path icon highlighting a single chosen route
Pick the highest-scoring option that passes deal-breakers.

Then write one next action that is small and concrete:

  • Open / confirm account type: taxable vs IRA/401(k)-style options (depending on what’s available to you).
  • Set an amount: a starter contribution you won’t miss.
  • Set a schedule: monthly or per paycheck.
  • Set a rule: “I won’t change this choice for 90 days unless fees change or my goal changes.”

This is how you stop the loop: you replace “research” with a reversible, low-drama step.

Quick takeaway: a calm comparison beats a clever one

If you can (1) define the decision, (2) cap the options, (3) score the same categories, and (4) take one small next step, you’ve already done what most “endless comparison” never achieves: progress with less stress.