what is information diet?
An information diet is the deliberate curation and limitation of your information intake — choosing quality over quantity to improve thinking, focus, and retention.
understanding information diet
The term, popularized by Clay Johnson's 2012 book 'The Information Diet,' draws a parallel between food consumption and information consumption. Just as an uncontrolled food diet leads to obesity, uncontrolled information consumption leads to cognitive overload, shallow thinking, and diminished ability to focus.
An information diet does not mean consuming less. It means consuming deliberately — selecting sources that merit deep engagement, eliminating sources that provide only novelty without insight, and building in processing time after consumption.
The average person in 2026 spends nearly 7 hours daily consuming digital content. An information diet asks: of those 7 hours, how many produced a single idea you can articulate today?
why it matters
Information overconsumption creates the illusion of learning without its substance. You feel informed because you have been exposed to many topics, but you cannot articulate a considered perspective on any of them.
An information diet replaces breadth with depth, producing less consumption but more actual knowledge and stronger personal perspectives.
how to apply it
Start with an audit: for one week, track every piece of content you consume and rate each on a scale of 1-5 for how much it contributed to your thinking. Anything consistently below 3, eliminate or unsubscribe.
Then introduce a rule: for every hour of consumption, spend 10 minutes reflecting. This natural friction reduces overconsumption while ensuring that what you do consume gets properly processed.
related concepts
Deep Reading
Deep reading is sustained, focused engagement with a text that involves critical analysis, emotional connection, and reflection — as opposed to skimming or scanning.
Slow Thinking
Slow thinking is deliberate, effortful cognitive processing — what psychologist Daniel Kahneman calls 'System 2' thinking — as opposed to the fast, automatic, intuitive judgments of System 1.
Reflective Thinking
Reflective thinking is the deliberate process of examining your own thoughts, beliefs, and responses to experiences or information — turning raw input into personal insight.