Why Scorecards Beat Gut Feelings
Why systematic comparison leads to more confident relocation decisions.
Gut feelings about cities are real - but they're not reliable. When you're deciding where to plant your life, "it just feels right" can shift every time you read a new blog post or talk to a new person. A weighted scorecard doesn't replace your instincts; it gives them structure.
Here's what the method does: you decide in advance which factors matter most to you - cost of living, job market, climate, community, proximity to family - and you assign each one a weight. Then you score every city you're considering against those same criteria. The city that fits your actual priorities rises to the top, not the one with the best Instagram aesthetic.
| Approach | What drives the decision | Common outcome |
|---|---|---|
| Gut feeling | Mood, recent articles, other people's opinions | Second-guessing after you move |
| Weighted scorecard | Your own priorities, scored consistently | A clear frontrunner you can defend |
The weight you assign each factor is the key step. A 10% weight on "nightlife" and a 30% weight on "school quality" tells a completely different story than the reverse - even if the raw scores are identical. Getting the weights right means knowing what you actually need, not what sounds good to say.