Procrastination to Progress

Dawdle helps you stop procrastinating with science-backed strategies that turn intention into action. Powered by psychology, it’s your personal productivity coach in an app. Coming soon—procrastination ends here!

The Science Behind Dawdle

Instead of waiting for a deadline to force action, Dawdle helps you break through procrastination right now, making tasks feel more doable and rewarding from the start.

Utility-Aversion Gap

Procrastination happens when we weigh the benefits of completing a task against how unpleasant it feels to do it. Zhang and Feng (2019) call this the Utility-Aversion Gap—if a task feels more dreadful than rewarding, we tend to put it off. But when a deadline gets close, the benefits of finishing finally outweigh the discomfort, pushing us into action (often under stress).

The Problem

Dawdle tackles procrastination in two ways: Reducing Task Aversion – We use a technique called Affect Labeling, a proven method that helps regulate emotions by simply acknowledging them. This makes tasks feel less overwhelming; Boosting Task Utility – We make the benefits of getting started feel more immediate by applying research-backed strategies like subgoal generation, time management techniques, and small rewards to keep you motivated.

The Intervention

The issue is that, for most tasks, the feeling of aversion outweighs the benefits until the deadline is looming. This means we procrastinate even when we logically want to get things done. The result? Stress, anxiety, frustration, and a cycle of last-minute scrambling—none of which are great for productivity or well-being.

The Story

Dawdle is the brainchild of Anusha Garg, a Ph.D. candidate at the University of California, Santa Barbara. Throughout her research on procrastination, habit formation, and self-regulation, Anusha noticed a gap in existing productivity and anti-procrastination tools. Most apps rely on therapeutic techniques that require long-term use—often spanning weeks or months—before yielding meaningful results. While these approaches are valuable, they don't always address the immediate struggle: the moment when a task is being avoided right now.

Anusha sought to tackle what she calls "state" procrastination—the act of delaying a task in the present moment despite wanting to complete it. Dawdle was designed to help users break through that resistance in real time, providing immediate strategies rooted in psychological research to help them take action. Whether it’s starting an overwhelming project, tackling a boring task, or breaking free from the cycle of avoidance, Dawdle offers science-backed nudges to turn intention into action—right when it matters most.