Hello!

To begin, we'll ask a few questions about you, your child, their digital life and what success will look like in our work together. This should take about 10 minutes.

If you have questions along the way or want to add more detail to any of your answers, just tap the button in the top left corner.

Step 1
About you.
Step 1
About your child.
12
Step 2
David's digital life.
About How Many Hours Per Day Is David Online?
8
When Does His Concerning Tech Use Tend to Occur?
3P 11P
Step 2
David's digital life.
Which apps, games or activities does David engage with in ways that are concerning?

Select all that apply. Tap + to add another

YouTube
TikTok
Fortnite
Instagram
Roblox
Snapchat
Discord
Twitch
+
OK. Which streaming video platforms and online games are your biggest concerns? Try to be as specific as possible.
I'd say YouTube and Fortnite.
Got it. What else do you think we should know about David's digital life? Anything more about what he's doing or when he's doing it?
Just that it's so hard to pull apart when he's doing something OK like schoolwork or chatting with friends in healthy ways - and when he's not.
That makes a lot of sense — it's one of the trickiest parts of managing screen time. We'll help you sort through that. Ready to move on to talking about how this is impacting David?
Step 3
How has this impacted David?
Select all that apply. We'll go deeper on each in a moment.
Mood
Family Relationships
Activity Avoidance
Friendships
Energy
Focus
Grades
Sleep
School Avoidance
Diet
Add
You mentioned David's focus, grades, and family relationships have been impacted. Let's talk about each of these.
How has his energy been affected? Is he more tired, restless, or something else?
He's just always tired. But then somehow has endless energy for gaming.
That's a really common pattern we see. Thank you, that's helpful information. Shall we move onto talking about your past attempts to change this behavior?
Step 4
What have you tried so far?
Are there specific tactics or strategies you've employed to try and change David's concerning behaviors? Select all that apply.
Non-Digital Together Time
I Haven't Really Tried Yet
Rewards
Punishments
Digital Time Together
Threats
Heart-to-Hearts
Add
You've tried a few things already — rewards, punishments, threats, heart-to-hearts, and non-digital time together. That's a lot of effort.
Which of these felt like they had any positive impact, even temporarily?
Heart-to-hearts worked for a day or two. But then everything went back to normal.
Thank you, that's helpful information. Let's talk about what David likes (or used to) do that's non-digital.
Step 5
What else does David enjoy?
Are there any non-digital activities that David enjoys or has enjoyed in the past? Select all that apply.
Sports
Cooking
Board Games
Pets/Animals
Arts & Crafts
Building Things
Walks/Hiking
Music
Reading
Add
Sports and building things — that's great. Got it. Which sports does David enjoy the most?
He used to play basketball but gradually drifted away from it. He seemed to have a hard time finding others to play with him.
That makes sense. OK, now let's wrap up by talking a bit about what success will look like.
Step 6
Great. Let's confirm your plan goals.
Based on your inputs so far, we'll focus on the following goals over the next 8 weeks. Tap a goal to reprioritize or delete. Choose + to add.
Less Time Playing Fortnite
Less Time On YouTube
Improved Mood
Better Sleep
+
Step 7
Has David been diagnosed with any conditions?
Reassurance about privacy and security. Your data is protected and only used to personalize David's plan.
NO
YES
Step 7
Well-Being
In general, how would you rate David's overall well-being?
EXCELLENT
VERY GOOD
GOOD
FAIR
POOR
Step 7
Emotional Health
How would you rate his mood and emotional state?
EXCELLENT
VERY GOOD
GOOD
FAIR
POOR
Step 7
Stress
How well has David been able to manage stress, worries, or frustrations?
EXTREMELY WELL
VERY WELL
SOMEWHAT WELL
NOT VERY WELL
NOT AT ALL WELL
Step 7
Social Health
How satisfied does he seem with friendships and social activities?
EXCELLENT
VERY GOOD
GOOD
FAIR
POOR
Step 7
Family Life
How positive and cooperative has his interaction with family members been?
EXCELLENT
VERY GOOD
GOOD
FAIR
POOR
Step 7
Daily Functioning
How much has David's emotions or behaviors interfered with schoolwork, hobbies, or daily activities?
NOT AT ALL
A LITTLE
SOMEWHAT
QUITE A LOT
VERY MUCH
Step 7
Distress
How distressed or upset has he seemed in the past week?
NOT AT ALL
A LITTLE
SOMEWHAT
QUITE A LOT
EXTREMELY
Step 7
Sleep Duration
On most nights, how many hours of sleep has David gotten?
9-10 HOURS
8 HOURS
7 HOURS
6 HOURS
LESS THAN 6 HOURS
Step 7
Sleep Quality
Overall, how restful or refreshing has David's sleep been?
EXCELLENT
VERY GOOD
GOOD
FAIR
POOR
Step 7
Physical Activity
On most days, how physically active has he been?
VERY ACTIVE (60+ MIN/DAY)
ACTIVE (30-59 MIN/DAY)
SOMEWHAT (15-29 MIN/DAY)
RARELY ACTIVE (<15 MIN/DAY)
NOT ACTIVE AT ALL
D

David's plan is ready to be created.

Based on everything you've shared, here's what you'll get:

  • A personalized 8-week behavior change plan
  • AI coaching available anytime via chat
  • Weekly check-ins that adapt your plan
  • Plan updates based on David's progress

Your goals: Less Fortnite, Less YouTube, Improved Mood, Better Sleep, Less School Avoidance

Choose your plan.

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per month
Monthly
$19
per month
SAVE 34%
Annual

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You're all set!

Your subscription is active. Let's create David's personalized plan now.

Creating
David's Plan

Helpful information, expectation setting here... rotating copy points.

Hey Christine, here's an encouraging headline/thought for week 1's tasks...
Complete
Read your plan overview
What to do

Head to the Plan tab to read through David's full 8-week plan. Understanding the overall arc will help each week's tasks make more sense.

🔥 Today
Set your plan start date
What to do

Pick a realistic start date for your plan. Choose a week where you'll have time to focus — avoid holidays or unusually busy periods.

Why it matters

Starting when you're ready sets the tone for success. Rushing in during a chaotic week can make things feel harder than they need to be.

📅 Wednesday (10/15)
Have a casual conversation with David about his gaming
What to do

Find a relaxed moment — maybe during a car ride or while cooking — and ask David what games he's been into lately. Listen without judgment. The goal is understanding, not correcting.

Tips

Ask open-ended questions like "What do you like about that game?" or "Who do you play with?" Avoid leading with screen time concerns.

📅 This week
Observe David's screen time without intervening
What to do

For 2-3 days, simply notice when David reaches for a screen, how long he stays on, and what triggers the usage. Jot down quick notes if helpful.

Why it matters

Observation before intervention helps you identify patterns. You may notice screen time spikes after school or when he's bored — insights that will guide the next steps.

📅 This week
Note one positive non-screen moment
What to do

Notice a moment this week where David is engaged without a screen — reading, playing outside, building something, or even just talking. Write it down or snap a mental picture.

Why it matters

Recognizing what already works gives you building blocks for the weeks ahead. It also shifts your focus from "what's wrong" to "what's possible."

Great momentum! Let's shape David's environment to support the changes...
Complete
Move charging stations out of bedrooms
What to do

Move all phone and tablet chargers out of David's bedroom to a shared family space. This reduces the temptation to use screens late at night.

Complete
Set up a shared family charging spot
What to do

Pick a visible, shared spot in your home — like the kitchen counter or a hallway table — where all family devices charge overnight. Make it the norm for everyone, not just David.

🔥 Today
Establish a "no screens at dinner" rule together
What to do

At dinner tonight, propose a "no phones at the table" rule. Frame it as something the whole family does — including you. Let David help define what counts (TV off too? Music OK?).

Tips

Keep it positive: "Let's try something — no phones at dinner this week, all of us." If David resists, suggest a trial period rather than a permanent rule.

📅 This week
Create a visible daily schedule with David
What to do

Sit down with David and map out a typical weekday together — school, homework, activities, free time, meals, and bedtime. Write it on a whiteboard or print it out and post it somewhere visible.

Why it matters

A visible schedule makes expectations clear and reduces daily negotiations. When David helped create it, he's more likely to follow through.

📅 This week
Set up parental controls on shared devices
What to do

Review the parental control settings on any shared family devices (iPad, smart TV, game console). Enable screen time limits or content filters as appropriate for David's age.

Tips

Be transparent with David about what you're setting up and why. Controls work best when paired with conversation, not secrecy.

Time to build some new habits into the daily rhythm...
Start a 30-minute after-school outdoor activity
What to do

When David gets home from school, go outside together for 30 minutes before any screens. Walk the dog, shoot hoops, ride bikes — whatever he's into.

Why it matters

After-school is the highest-risk window for defaulting to screens. Replacing it with movement creates a healthy buffer and helps David transition from school mode.

Introduce a morning routine without screens
What to do

Work with David to create a screen-free morning. That means no phone or tablet until he's dressed, fed, and ready for school. Consider leaving devices in the charging spot until a set time.

Tips

Model this yourself — if David sees you scrolling at breakfast, the rule feels unfair. Keep mornings simple: breakfast, get ready, then devices.

Set a consistent homework-before-screens rule
What to do

Agree with David that homework and any reading happen before recreational screen time. Help him pick a consistent homework spot and time each day.

Why it matters

When screens come after responsibilities, David learns to manage delayed gratification — a skill that extends well beyond screen time.

Let's fill the space with things David actually enjoys...
Sign David up for one new extracurricular
What to do

Explore activities David might enjoy — sports, art classes, coding clubs, music lessons, scouts. Let him have a say in what he tries. Sign up for at least one this week.

Why it matters

Structured activities fill time that might otherwise default to screens, and they build social connections and skills that compete with screen appeal.

Plan a weekend family activity without screens
What to do

Pick one thing to do together this weekend that doesn't involve screens — hike, board game night, cook a meal together, visit a park, go to the library. Put it on the calendar.

Tips

Let David choose from 2-3 options so he feels ownership. The activity matters less than the quality time — keep it low-pressure and fun.

Help David find a creative hobby to explore
What to do

Talk with David about things he's curious about — drawing, building models, writing stories, photography, cooking. Pick one and get the supplies or materials to try it out this week.

Why it matters

Creative hobbies provide the same sense of flow and engagement that screens offer, but with lasting skill-building and a deeper sense of satisfaction.

You're halfway through — let's lock in what's working...
Review and adjust screen time limits with David
What to do

Sit down with David and review how the current screen time limits are working. Are they realistic? Too strict? Not enough? Adjust together based on what you've both learned over the past weeks.

Why it matters

Rules that evolve with input from your child feel fair and are more sustainable. This conversation shows David you respect his perspective.

Celebrate progress — acknowledge what's working
What to do

Take a moment to recognize what's improved — whether it's less screen time, better mornings, or smoother transitions. Tell David specifically what you've noticed and that you're proud of the effort.

Tips

Be specific: "I noticed you put your phone down without being asked at dinner twice this week" works better than "good job with screens." Celebrate effort, not just outcomes.

Troubleshoot any routines that aren't sticking
What to do

Look at the routines you've introduced so far. Which ones are working? Which feel like a daily battle? For the ones that aren't sticking, brainstorm adjustments — smaller steps, different timing, or a new approach.

Why it matters

Flexibility isn't failure — it's smart parenting. The goal is sustainable change, and sometimes that means tweaking the plan to fit real life.

Week 1
Awareness & Co-Design
Complete
Week 2 - Current
Environmental Shaping
2 of 5 TO DOs Complete
Week 3
Introduce New Routines
Starts Mon, Nov 4
Week 4
Strengthen Replacement Activities
Starts Mon, Nov 11
Week 5
Building Consistency
Starts Mon, Nov 18
Today
Hi Christine! How's it going with David this week? Remember, this week's focus is on environmental shaping — small changes to his surroundings that can make a big difference.
If you have any questions about your tasks or want to talk through a situation, I'm here.
Hi Christine, how's it all going? Please take a moment to complete the following 5 minute survey. Your answers will allow us to update and tune your plan to better help David reduce his YouTube time.
1 of X
How well do you feel you can quantify/estimate David's screen use this week?
Very Well
Somewhat well
Not well
Somewhat well
2 of X
About how many minutes/day would you estimate David spent on YouTube on average this week?
Less than 90 minutes
90-120 minutes
120-180 minutes
More than 3 hours
120-180 minutes
3 of X
How satisfied are you with David's balance of screen vs. non-screen time this week?
1 = Very unsatisfied | 5 = Very satisfied
1
2
3
4
5
4 of X
What would you say was David's biggest win this week related to reducing his YouTube time?
C
Christine
christine@email.com
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