The STOP Method

A 4-step framework for when you need to choose something now. STOP is a mnemonic — Scan, Trust, One check, Pick.

The 3-Minute Reality Check

Sometimes you need dish soap right now. Your kid has a diaper blowout and you’re out of wipes. The cleaning product you ordered didn’t arrive and guests are coming tonight.

Life happens. The STOP Method is how you make a good-enough decision in three minutes — without analysis paralysis, without guilt, and without defaulting to whatever’s familiar because you’re too tired to think.

The Framework at a Glance

Four steps. Two to three minutes. Designed to be remembered without a cheat sheet.

  • S — Scan the basics
  • T — Trust your red flags
  • O — One quick check
  • P — Pick and move on

Total time: 2–3 minutes in the aisle.

Step 1: Scan the Basics

Does this even meet my basic needs? (30 seconds)

Before anything else, three quick filters. If a product fails any of them, you’re done evaluating it — keep looking.

  • Function — Will this actually do what I need?
  • Budget — Can I afford this without stress?
  • Size/Type — Right size for my space and usage?

Immediate eliminators:

  • Way over budget
  • Wrong product type (spray when you need liquid)
  • Size that won’t work (gallon jug when you need travel size)

Passes the filter? Move to Step 2. If not, keep looking.

Step 2: Trust Your Red Flags

What does your gut already know? (60 seconds)

Look at the first 5 ingredients — these make up 80% or more of most products. You’re not auditing every line. You’re scanning for things you already know don’t work for your family.

Immediate red flags:

  • Ingredients you know cause problems for your family
  • Fragrances if anyone has sensitivities
  • Anything you can’t pronounce and sounds concerning
  • Warning labels that make you uncomfortable

Trust your instincts:

  • If the ingredient list makes you uneasy, listen to that
  • If marketing claims seem too good to be true, they probably are
  • If you’re second-guessing, there’s usually a reason

One of two readings: “this feels okay” or “this feels sketchy.” That’s enough — you’re not writing a thesis.

Step 3: One Quick Check

What can you verify right now? (60 seconds)

One piece of fresh information that makes you more confident. Pick one of these — don’t run all four.

With your phone:

  • EWG Quick Search — type the product name + “EWG rating”
  • Brand reputation check — Google “[Brand] safety concerns”
  • Ingredient lookup — search the most concerning ingredient on the label
  • Review scan — check Amazon or Target app for pattern complaints

No phone or poor signal? Compare and contrast:

  • Look at 2–3 similar products side by side
  • Choose the shortest, most recognizable ingredient list
  • Pick the brand you’ve had good experiences with before
  • When in doubt, fewer synthetic fragrances and dyes

The goal is one data point that makes you more confident — not certainty.

Step 4: Pick and Move On

Make the decision. Don’t look back. (30 seconds)

You’ve gathered reasonable information for the time available. Perfect information isn’t possible in three minutes, and a good-enough decision made quickly is better than analysis paralysis. You can always evaluate more thoroughly for your next purchase.

If the product:

  • Meets your basic needs (Step 1)
  • Doesn’t trigger major red flags (Step 2)
  • Has at least one reassuring data point (Step 3)

Buy it. Move on with your day.

AN ENGINEER’S NOTE

When to Walk Away

Sometimes the answer is not today. The STOP Method works best when you also know when to bail out.

Bail-out scenarios:

  • Nothing feels right — every option triggers red flags
  • Information overload — too many conflicting claims to sort through quickly
  • Gut check fails — something feels off and you can’t pinpoint why
  • Analysis paralysis — you’ve been standing there for 10+ minutes

Better alternatives:

  • Order online later when you can do a proper evaluation
  • Ask for recommendations in your trusted communities
  • Buy the smallest size of a “good enough” option to test
  • DIY a temporary solution until you can research properly

Worked Example: Emergency Dish Soap

You’re at the store. Your dishwasher broke this morning, you have a sink full of dishes, and you forgot dish soap is on the list. Here’s what STOP looks like in real time.

Step 1 — Scan

Need dish soap, under $5, regular bottle size. Three options on the shelf fit.

Step 2 — Trust

  • Dawn — first ingredient is a sulfate, which dries my hands.
  • Seventh Generation — shorter ingredient list, no fragrance.
  • Method — fragrance is in the top 5, and I’m sensitive. 

Step 3 — One Check

Pull up EWG on my phone. Seventh Generation Free & Clear gets a B rating. That’s the data point I needed.

Step 4 — Pick

Buy Seventh Generation. Total time in the aisle: 2 minutes 40 seconds. Move on with the day, and add “research the dish soap aisle properly” to the list for next weekend.

Got time? Use CLEAR.

The STOP Method is for the aisle. The CLEAR Method is for the kitchen table — when you have 30–60 minutes, you’re researching a product you’ll use daily for years, and the upfront investment is worth the long-term peace of mind.

The Bottom Line

Perfect is the enemy of good enough. Sometimes you need to buy something right now, and this method helps you do it without stress.

Your quick decision today is better than:

  • Analysis paralysis in the store
  • Buying nothing and staying stuck
  • Stress-shopping the most expensive “clean” option
  • Defaulting to whatever’s familiar without thinking

You’re building decision-making skills — not making life-or-death choices about dish soap.