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Offer choices to support client autonomy

When clients pick between options instead of receiving a single recommendation, they commit more deeply and follow through more reliably — because the plan is theirs.

When to use this
Goal settingMid-sessionClosing
  • When agreeing on an action between sessions
  • When a client seems compliant but unenthusiastic about a plan
  • When the client has been told what to do by other professionals and is feeling boxed in
  • When you notice yourself about to prescribe a single solution
Why this matters

Self-determination theory identifies autonomy as one of three core psychological needs (alongside competence and relatedness) that drive sustained motivation. When clients feel a plan is being done *to* them, motivation drops — even when the plan is good. When they feel it's being done *by* them, motivation rises.

The practical move is small but powerful: offer two or three viable options rather than a single recommendation. "We could try A, B, or C — which feels most doable for you?" The coach still brings expertise (the options are well-chosen), but the choice belongs to the client. That ownership is what turns intention into action.

This is not the same as being non-directive or withholding your view. Coaches who refuse to suggest anything leave clients drifting. Offering choices threads the needle: directive enough to be useful, autonomous enough to stick.

In practice

A client wants to drink less alcohol. A typical coach: "I'd recommend cutting back to weekends only." Client: "Okay, I'll try." (Compliance, not commitment.) An autonomy-supportive coach: "There are a few ways people approach this — some go alcohol-free on weekdays, some set a weekly limit, some take a full 30-day break to reset. Which of those sounds most like something you'd actually do?" Client picks the 30-day reset, owns it, and sticks with it because they chose it.

What to say

Word-for-word phrases you can use in session.

  • There are a few directions we could go with this. Option A would be... Option B would be... Option C would be... Which of those sounds most like you?
  • I can think of two or three ways people typically approach this. Want me to lay them out, and you pick the one that fits?

Three options is the sweet spot. One feels like a prescription; five feels like a quiz. Make sure each option is genuinely viable — fake choices erode trust.

Source: Deci, E.L. & Ryan, R.M. (2000). The "what" and "why" of goal pursuits: Human needs and the self-determination of behavior. Psychological Inquiry, 11(4), 227-268.

Try it today

In your next session, before recommending anything, generate two or three viable options in your head. Present them as a menu: "Here are a few ways this could go — which one would you actually do?" Notice whether commitment feels different from when you give a single recommendation.

Make it a habit

Make "what would you like to try?" a standard part of closing every session. Resist the urge to prescribe a single next step — let the client choose from a small set, even if you have a preference.

Watch out for
  • Offering false choices where one option is clearly the 'right' answer — clients see through it and feel manipulated rather than empowered.
  • Offering so many options the client freezes — three is usually the right number. More than that, decision fatigue takes over.
  • Confusing autonomy support with abdication — clients still want your expertise. The skill is curating good options, not refusing to have a view.
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