Personal phone experiment

Personal Phone Experiment: Switch from Smartphone to Dumb Phone

A practical template to run a 7–30 day experiment and learn what your phone use actually does to your focus, mood, and daily habits.

Before you start

  • Pick a duration: 7 days (test) or 30 days (real insights).
  • Set your “non-negotiables”: what must keep working for daily life.
  • Plan your replacement tools: what will replace smartphone-only functions.
  • Decide the rules: full switch, or “smartphone allowed only for X minutes/day”.
  • Tell 1–2 people: so they don’t panic when you reply slower

Common non-negotiables (examples): bank payments, Smart-ID / identity confirmation, maps, tickets, work chat, two-factor authentication.

Quick self-audit (5 minutes)

Answer these before changing anything. This is your “baseline”.

  1. What do you use your phone for the most (top 5)?
  2. Which functions are required to function in society (for you)?
  3. Which apps trigger the most “automatic checking”?
  4. When do you use it most: morning, work breaks, evening, in bed?
  5. What do you hope changes: focus, sleep, mood, productivity, anxiety, social connection?

Download the template

The template includes: baseline questions, daily check-ins, a weekly reflection, and a final “what changed” summary.
Disclaimer: this is only a template. For the best results edit the sheet or contact us for quotation if you are running a wider project and would like an integration into your organisation/personal project.

What phone should I use?

Any dumb phone / flip phone works. The key is removing the “infinite feed” and app switching. Even a smartphone in airplane mode doesn’t recreate the same friction.

What if I need Smart-ID / banking?

Plan the workaround first: desktop banking, scheduled “admin windows”, or keeping the smartphone as an emergency tool with strict rules (no socials).

How do I know it “worked”?

Track one or two outcomes: sleep quality, focus blocks completed, mood stability, or how often you feel the urge to check a phone that isn’t there.