My dad's furious "never again" phone call to some faceless company stuck with me for decades. Fast forward to last weekend: I'm rage-quitting Dropbox after a seemingly small slight.
Sound familiar? If you're a chronic tool switcher like me, you know that moment when you've had enough. But here's what nobody talks about—switching tools isn't just about clicking "cancel subscription." That’s why today I want to talk about what the actual costs are, and how to determine when to switch tools — when it will cause more clarity than chaos.
Are tools just part of the problem? Take the Business Overwhelm Diagnostic
Top Takeaways
- The hidden costs of switching tools go way beyond money—you're investing time to learn new systems, mental energy on decision-making, potential workflow disruption, and losing the knowledge you've built up with your current tool.
- Write a job description for your tools to evaluate if there's true feature parity between what you have and what you're considering—switching for the sake of switching rarely pays off.
- Test before you fully commit and consider how the switch affects your team members, contractors, and existing automations—I learned this the hard way when my editor's workflow got disrupted.
- Sometimes switching back is the right move—there's no shame in admitting a tool change didn't work out, especially if you can easily reverse course.
Send feedback to at https://streamlinedfeedback.com
Show Notes
★ Support this podcast ★