Todd Rogers
Tagline:Weatherhead Professor of Public Policy, Harvard Kennedy School of Government
Cambridge, MA, USA
About Me
I design, evaluate, and scale innovations that help people thrive, make organizations more effective, and strengthen society.
This work leads to peer-reviewed research, new policies and practices, and social enterprise startups.
Current Focus Areas:
Positions
Harvard Kennedy School of Government:
Weatherhead Chair, Professor of Public Policy
Faculty Director, Behavioral Insights Group
Faculty Chair, Behavioral Insights and Public Policy, Executive Education Program
Faculty Director, Graduate Commons Program
Social Enterprises:
Fan U (Co-founder)
EveryDay Labs (Co-founder, equity holder, board member, & unpaid Chief Scientist)
Analyst Institute (Co-founder)
Behavioral Communications (Co-founder)
Behavioral Science Advisory:
ideas42 (Senior Scientist)
Behavioural Insights Team (Academic Advisor)
Behavioral Science and Policy Association (Executive Committee)
Curriculum Vitae (CV)
DownloadPublications
Automated Reminders Reduce Incarceration for Missed Court Dates: Evidence from a Text Message Experiment.
Journal ArticlePublisher:Science AdvancesDate:2025Authors:Cholas-Woodal(reviseresubmit)Concise writing is more effective but is perceived as less important
Journal ArticlePublisher:(under review)Date:2025Authors:C. DorisonT. RogersAttendance is a family affair
Journal ArticlePublisher:Educational LeadershipDate:2024Authors:Karen MappTodd RogersDescription:New research shows how schools can build family engagement as a strategy to reduce absenteeism.Reducing student absenteeism at scale: Translating social norms and attention interventions.
Book ChapterPublisher:What works, what doesn’t (and when): Case studies in applied behavioral scienceDate:2024Authors:Reading Dies in Complexity: Online News Consumers Prefer Simple Writing.
Journal ArticlePublisher:Science AdvancesDate:2024Authors:H. ShulmanMarkowitz D.T. RogersWriting for Busy Readers: Communicate More Effectively in the Real World
BookPublisher:Penguin Random HouseDate:2023Authors:T. RogersJ. Lasky-FinkSignals of value drive engagement with multi-round information interventions.
Journal ArticlePublisher:PLOS OneDate:2022Authors:Jessica Lasky-FinkTodd RogersDescription:For information interventions to be effective, recipients must first engage with them. We show that engagement with repeated digital information interventions is shaped by subtle and strategically controllable signals of the information’s value. In particular, recipients’ expectations are shaped by signals from the “envelope” that surrounds a message in an information intervention. The envelope conveys clues about the message but does not reveal the message itself. When people expect the message to be valuable, delivering it in a consistent and recognizable envelope over time increases engagement relative to varying the envelope. Conversely, when people expect the message to be of little value, delivering it in a consistent and recognizable envelope decreases engagement relative to varying the envelope. We show this with two field experiments involving massive open online courses and one online survey experiment (all pre-registered, N = 439,150).A Randomized Trial of Behavioral Nudges Delivered Through Text Messages to Increase Influenza Vaccination Among Patients With an Upcoming Primary Care Visit
Journal ArticlePublisher:American Journal of Health PromotionDate:2022Authors:Mitesh S. PatelKatherine L. MilkmanLinnea GandhiHeather N. GraciDena GrometHung HoJoseph S. KayTimothy W. LeeJake RothschildModupe AkinolaJohn BeshearsTodd RogersUsing Behavioral Insights to Improve School Administrative Communications:The Case of Truancy Notifications
DocumentDate:2021Authors:Jessica Lasky-FinkCarly RobinsonHedy ChangTodd RogersA megastudy of text-based nudges encouraging patients to get vaccinated at an upcoming doctor’s appointment
Journal ArticlePublisher:Proceedings of the National Academy of SciencesDate:2021Authors:Katherine MilkmanMitesh PatelLinnea GandhiHeather GraciDena GrometHung HoJoseph KayTimothy LeeModupe AkinolaJohn BeshearsJonathan BogardAlison ButtenheimChristopher ChabrisGretchen ChapmanJames ChoiHengchen DaiCraig FoxAmir GorenMatthew HilcheyJillian HmurovicLeslie JohnDean KarlanMelanie KimDavid LaibsonCait LambertonBrigitte MadrianMichelle MeyerMaria ModanuJimin NamTodd RogersRenante RondinaSilvia SaccardoMaheen ShermohammedDilip SomanJehan SparksCaleb WarrenMegan WeberRon BermanChalanda EvansChristopher SniderEli TsukayamaChristophe Van BulteKevin VolppAngela DuckworthDescription:Many Americans fail to get life-saving vaccines each year, and the availability of a vaccine for COVID-19 makes the challenge of encouraging vaccination more urgent than ever. We present a large field experiment (N = 47,306) testing 19 nudges delivered to patients via text message and designed to boost adoption of the influenza vaccine. Our findings suggest that text messages sent prior to a primary care visit can boost vaccination rates by an average of 5%. Overall, interventions performed better when they were 1) framed as reminders to get flu shots that were already reserved for the patient and 2) congruent with the sort of communications patients expected to receive from their healthcare provider (i.e., not surprising, casual, or interactive). The best-performing intervention in our study reminded patients twice to get their flu shot at their upcoming doctor’s appointment and indicated it was reserved for them. This successful script could be used as a template for campaigns to encourage the adoption of life-saving vaccines, including against COVID-19.
Advice on Communication
The Victory Lab
date: 2025Description:The science behind winning political campaigns.
Writing for Busy Readers
date: 2025Description:Helping organizations write effectively—so busy people actually read and respond.
Effective Communication at Work
date: 2025Organization:Harvard Business Review