If you step back a bit from the boots example you can see the boots theory in action.
Consider socks (I know there's another thread that calls this a 'micro-optimization', likely right, but still...).
Never buy a pair of socks. Or, never buy one pair of socks -- buy a few packs, identical, well priced, and ideally on sale. If on sale, buy them now: if they're clearance, you may not get to come back tomorrow. Now you save:
- money: when one sock wears out, you don't need to discard an orphan. Also,
if they are prone to early wearing out, you get enough warning to look for
another sale.
- time: when sorting, you don't need to match individual socks --- the
green ones all match
But a dozen or more pairs of socks looks like an investment when you are on minimum wage.
Consider socks (I know there's another thread that calls this a 'micro-optimization', likely right, but still...).
Never buy a pair of socks. Or, never buy one pair of socks -- buy a few packs, identical, well priced, and ideally on sale. If on sale, buy them now: if they're clearance, you may not get to come back tomorrow. Now you save:
- money: when one sock wears out, you don't need to discard an orphan. Also, if they are prone to early wearing out, you get enough warning to look for another sale.
- time: when sorting, you don't need to match individual socks --- the green ones all match
But a dozen or more pairs of socks looks like an investment when you are on minimum wage.