The book talks about a set of habits which differentiates successful people from the normal. It criticizes [recently popular] personality ethic which it terms as deceptive and manipulative and calls for character ethic which is a fundamental change in human character. This change must begin from inside and spreads out [inside-out] and the reverse is not possible.
The book is divided into three parts
- Private Victory
- Be Proactive
focus on where you can do something. that is, focus on the circle of influence instead of the circle of concern - Begin with the end in mind
while starting something thinking about what to do after it attained
(The book also talks about how most people are centered around someone/something like spouse-centered, money-centered, job-centered and suggests that being principle-centered in the highest form) - Put first things first
Successful people don’t do what they like to do but what they have to do.
The author divides all our activities into four quadrants [important and urgent, important but not urgent, urgent but not important and neither urgent nor important]. He points out that most people focus on urgent things, we should instead focus on important things]
- Be Proactive
- Public Victory
- Think Win/Win
Integrity
Maturity
Go away with scarcity syndrome [accept abundance mentality]
stop thinking to win/lose - Seek first to understand and then to be understood
try doing empathic listening - Synergize
Admire people different than you and try to understand how differences can help you both.
- Think Win/Win
- Renewal
- Sharpen the saw
four dimensions of renewal – physical, mental, social/emotional, spiritual
keep learning new skills
- Sharpen the saw
The book aims at providing primary skills [paradigm shift] in thinking instead of secondary skills [personality ethic].
At the risk of being a bit flippant, I would suggest that the Zeroth Habit of all the highly effective people I have known is that don’t read “Seven Habits…” or any other self-help series. (You might be the first counterexample to this law. :D)
“At the risk of being a bit flippant, I would suggest that the Zeroth Habit of all the highly effective people I have known is that don’t read “Seven Habits…” or any other self-help series.”
I don’t disagree with this remark but I believe studying such books help becoming a not-so-effective person better than what (s)he is.