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7 Habits of Highly Effective People

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7 Habits of Highly Effective People
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AMAZON Top Best Selling The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People by Stephen R. Covey !
http://amzn.to/yJYw0U

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AMAZON Top Best Selling The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People by Stephen R. Covey !

http://amzn.to/yJYw0U



==== ====







Stephen Covey's 7 Habits of Highly Effective People was THE self help of the 1990's. Enthusiasm

and marketing of this book have dropped off in recent years but the lesson in the book are as

applicable today as they were 10 years ago.



The overall philosophy of the book is based on a maturity continuum which travels from

Dependence (you) to independence (I) to interdependence (we). Habits 1, 2, and 3 deal with self

mastery and private victories and assist in the transformation from dependent to independent.

Habits 4, 5, and 6 build teamwork, cooperation and communication. These include Public Victories

and transfer from the independent to the interdependent.



Habit 1: Be Proactive



There are 3 accepted theories of determinism to explain the nature of man.



1) Genetic determinism: it's inherited in your genes



2) Psychic determinism: Freudian, learned early from your parents



3) Environmental: this is from your boss, your spouse, the kids, the economy, policies, etc.



However, between stimulus and response, man has the freedom to choose. You can choose

through self awareness, imagination, conscience, and independent will.



Reactive vs Proactive



Reactive people are affected by their environment, the weather, how others treat them. Reactive

people are driven by feelings, by circumstances, by conditions, by their environment...



Proactive people are still influenced by external stimuli but their response to it is a value based

choice or response.



Eleanor Roosevelt: "No one can hurt you without your consent", example Victor Frankl - Nazi

POW



Self Awareness



Circle of Concern: where do we focus our time and energy? i.e. our health, finances, children,

work, national debt, etc.

Circle of Influence: these are the concerns we have control over either directly (problems involving

our own behaviour) or indirectly (problems involving the behaviour of others).



Any time we think the problem is "out there", that thought is the problem. We empower what is out

there to control us. This paradigm approach is from the outside-in, example "that much change

before I can..." The proactive approach is to generate change from the inside out.



Habit 2: Begin with the End in Mind



To begin with the end in mind means to start with a clear understanding of your destination. It

means know where you are going so that you can better understand where you are now and so

that the steps you take are always in the right direction.



Imagine your eulogy at your funeral. What would your friends say? What would you like them to

say? Your family? Your co-workers?



"Begin with the end in mind" is based on the principle that al things are created twice. There's a

mental of first creation and a physical or second creation to all things. There is an idea before

there is an action.



Management is a bottom line focus: How can I best accomplish certain things? Leadership deal

with the top line: What do I want to accomplish? Management is doing things right, leadership is

doing the right things. Management is efficiency in climbing the ladder of success; leadership is

determining whether the ladder is leaning against the right wall.



A Personal Mission Statement



The most effective way to build a personal mission statement is to begin with the end in mind.

Focus on what you want to be (character) and do (contribution and achievements) and on the

values upon which being and doing are based. Begin at the very center of your Circle of Influence.

Different people have different paradigms for the source of their center, i.e. spouse, family, work,

pleasure, money, self, but perhaps the center should be based upon principles instead?



Habit 3: Put First Things First



Effective management is all about putting first things first. While leadership decides what the "first

things" are, it is management that puts them first, day by day, moment by moment. Management

is the discipline carrying it out.



The successful person has the habit of doing the things failures don't like to do.



"Time Management" is actually a misnomer, time carries on despite us and we could never

manage it. But the challenge is not to manage time, but to manage ourselves.



Question: What one new thing could you do on a regular basis to improve: a) your personal life,

and/or b) your professional life?



Urgent: requires immediate attention, usually visible, often popular with others, right in front of us,

often easy fun to do



Important: implies results, contributes to your mission, values, goals, generally more tedious

without gratification.



We "react" to urgent matters, but must be proactive in regards to important matters.



Most people spend most of their time in Quandrants I and III. However, Quadrant II is the heart of

effective personal management. It emphasizes relationship building, long range planning,

exercising, preventative maintenance, and preparation. By expanding Quadrant II, you reduce

Quadrant I



There are 3 general faults of time and life management:



1) the inability to prioritize



2) the inability or desire to organize around the priorities



3) the lack of discipline to execute and stay with the priorities



or



4) Habit #2 is not internalized. There are many people who recognize the value of Quadrant II but

without a principle center and personal mission statement, they don't have the necessary

foundation to sustain their efforts.



6 Important Criteria for a Quadrant II Organizer



1) Coherence: harmony/unity/integrity between your personal mission statement, roles and goals,

priorities and plans, desires and discipline.



2) Balance: all roles are balanced, i.e. worder, spouse, parent, friend, self.



3) Quadrant II focus: organize on a weekly/monthly basis. The key is not to prioritize what is on

your schedule but to schedule your priorities.



4) A "People" dimension: involve/interact with others, delegate.



5) Flexibility: you planning tool should be your servant, never your master.



6) Portability: carry your tool with you



Habit 4: Think Win/Win



Win/Win is a frame of mind and heart that constantly seeks mutual benefit in all human

interactions. Win/Win sees life as a cooperative, not a competitive arena.



Other paradigms include:

Win/Lose: this is most popular in business, sports, academics and even as control in some

relationships.



Lose/Win: low self esteem, always put others before themselves regardless of the results.



Lose/Lose: this one is popular in divorce - if I can't have it, nobody will.



Win: a person with this mentality thinks in terms of securing his own ends and leaving it to others

to secure theirs.



Win/Win or No Deal: if both parties can't win, then walk away, keeping trust intact.



Character is the foundation of Win/Win



Three essential character traits include:



1) Integrity: goes back to your personal mission statement and values



2) Maturity: the balance between courage and consideration



3) Abundance mentality: the paradigm that there is plenty out there for everybody. This is the

opposite of the scarcity mentality.



For Win/Win the focus is on the results, not the methods. The essence of principled negotiation is

to separate the person from the problem, to focus on interests and not on positions, to invent

options for mutual gain, and to insist on objective criteria - some external standard or principle that

both parties can buy into.



First - see the problem from the other point of view



Second - identify key issues and concerns (not positions)



Third - determine what results would constitute a fully acceptable solution



Fourth - identify possible new options to achieve those results



Habit 5: Seek First to Understand, Then to be Understood



Communication is the most important skill in life. "Seek first to understand" involves a very deep

shift in paradigm. We typically seek first to be understood. Most people do not listen with the intent

to understand; they listen with the intent to reply. They're either speaking or preparing to speak.

They're filtering everything through their own paradigms, reading their autobiography into the other

people's lives.



When another speaks we're usually listening at one of 4 levels:



1) Ignoring - not really listening at all

2) Pretending - "yeah, "uh-huh", "right"



3) Selective listening - hearing only parts



4) Attentive listening - focusing and paying attention to the words



But few people practice the 5th level - Empathic Listening. This form of listening gets inside

another person's frame of reference. They see the world the way they see it. They understand

their paradigm and how they feel.



Next to physical survival, the greatest need of a human being is psychological survival; to be

understood, to be validated, to be appreciated.



Because we listen autobiographically, we tend to respond in one of four ways:



1) We evaluate: we agree or disagree



2) We probe: ask questions from our own frame of reference



3) We advise: give counsel based on our experience



4) We interpret: try to figure people out, explain their motives, based on our own paradigms



Some people believe empathic listening takes too much time. But it really is short term investment

for long term gain.



Know how to be understood is the other half of Habit 5 and is equally critical in reaching Win/Win

solutions.



To best be understood, one must possess:



1) Ethos: personal credibility, integrity, competence. Much of this comes from a character ethic

and your personal mission statement



2) Pathos: the empathic side, the feeling, the emotional alignment with the other person's

communication.



3) Logos: the logic, the reasoning part of the presentation



Habit 5 is powerful because it is found right in the middle of your Circle of Influence.



Habit 6: Synergize



Synergy is the essence of principle-centered leadership. It catalyzes, unifies, and unleashes the

greatest power within people. Simply defined the whole is greater than the sum of its parts, 1+1=

3, or more.

Most people can recall at least one synergistic event in their lives that had a profound effect, i.e.

team spirit, an emergency... To many, such events seem unusual, out of character, even

miraculous. But this is not so. These things can be produced regularly, consistently, almost daily in

people's lives. But it requires enormous personal security and openness, and a spirit of adventure.



One can even be synergistic with one's self. When a person has access to both the intuitive,

creative, and visual right brain and the analytical, logical, verbal left brain, then the whole brain is

working. There is psychic energy taking place in one's own head. The result is a logical AND

emotional response.



Synergy requires trust, openness, a Win/Win attitude, and the ability to value the differences.



Habit 7: Sharpen the Saw



Habit 7 is personal Production Capability (PC). It's preserving and enhancing the greatest asset

you have - you! It's renewing the 4 dimensions of your nature:



1) The physical dimension: eating the right food, getting sufficient rest and relaxation, and

exercising. This is a high leverage, Quadrant II activity that most of us don't do consistently

because it's not urgent.



2) The spiritual dimension: your core, your center, your commitment to your value system. It draws

on the sources that inspire and uplift you and is very private. Some may choose religion or

meditation. Some may find it in nature away from the noise and commotion of the city and unifying

with the harmony and rhythm of the earth.



3) The mental dimension: most of us experienced out mental development and study discipline

through a formal education. But once we graduated from school we let our minds atrophy. Surveys

show that a television is on in most homes 35-45 hours per week!



These three dimensions represent the "Daily Private Victory". One hour per day will affect every

decision and relationship. It will greatly improve every other hour of the day, including sleep, and it

will help you handle all challenges.



4) The Social Emotional Dimension: while the physical, spiritual and mental dimensions are

closely related to Habits 1,2,3 - centered on the principles of personal vision, leadership and

management, the Social/Emotional dimension focuses on Habits 4, 5, and 6, the principles of

interpersonal leadership, empathic communication, and creative cooperation. If our personal

security comes from sources within ourselves, then we have the strength to practice the habits of

Public Victory.



The 4 Dimensions Organizational Equivalents



1) Physical: expressed in economic terms



2) Mental: recognition, development, and use of talent



3) Social: human relations and how people are treated

4) Spiritual: finding meaning through purpose or contribution and through organizational integrity



If all 4 dimensions are not addressed, the organization will face problems in the form of collective

resistance, adversarialism, excessive turnover and other deep cultural problems.









Mike Caldwell B.Sc., MSM is the owner/operator of Corporate Synergy Inc. and the founder of

Team Building Leadership.com. For more articles and information on team building, leadership

and goal setting, simply visit http://www.team-building-leadership.com









Article Source:

http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Mike_Caldwell









==== ====



AMAZON Top Best Selling The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People by Stephen R. Covey !

http://amzn.to/yJYw0U



==== ====


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