Summary of Stephen R. Covey’s
In his #1 bestseller, Stephen R. Covey presented a
framework for personal effectiveness. The following is a summary of the
first part of his book, concluding with a list of the seven habits.
Inside-Out: The Change Starts from Within
While working on his doctorate in the 1970′s, Stephen R.
Covey reviewed 200 years of literature on success. He noticed that since
the 1920′s, success writings have focused on solutions to specific
problems. In some cases such tactical advice may have been effective,
but only for immediate issues and not for the long-term, underlying
ones. The success literature of the last half of the 20th century
largely attributed
success to personality traits, skills, techniques, maintaining a positive attitude, etc. This philosophy can be referred to as the Personality Ethic.
success to personality traits, skills, techniques, maintaining a positive attitude, etc. This philosophy can be referred to as the Personality Ethic.
However, during the 150 years or so that preceded that
period, the literature on success was more character oriented. It
emphasized the deeper principles and foundations of success. This
philosophy is known as the Character Ethic, under which success is attributed more to underlying characteristics such as integrity, courage, justice, patience, etc.
The elements of the Character Ethic are primary traits while those of the Personality Ethic are secondary.
While secondary traits may help one to play the game to succeed in some specific circumstances, for long-term success both are necessary.
One’s character is what is most visible in long-term relationships.
Ralph Waldo Emerson once said, “What you are shouts so loudly in my ears I cannot hear what you say.”
While secondary traits may help one to play the game to succeed in some specific circumstances, for long-term success both are necessary.
One’s character is what is most visible in long-term relationships.
Ralph Waldo Emerson once said, “What you are shouts so loudly in my ears I cannot hear what you say.”
To illustrate the difference between primary and secondary
traits, Covey offers the following example. Suppose you are in Chicago
and are using a map to find a particular destination in the city. You
may have excellent secondary skills in map reading and navigation, but
will never find your destination if you are using a map of Detroit. In
this example, getting the right map is a necessary primary element
before your secondary skills can be used effectively.
The problem with relying on the Personality Ethic is that
unless the basic underlying paradigms are right, simply changing outward
behavior is not effective. We see the world based on our perspective,
which can have a dramatic impact on the way we perceive things. For
example, many experiments have been conducted in which two groups of
people are shown two different drawings. One group is shown, for
instance, a drawing of a young, beautiful woman and the other group is
shown a drawing of an old, frail woman. After the initial exposure to
the pictures, both groups are shown one picture of a more abstract
drawing. This drawing actually contains the elements of both the young
and the old woman. Almost invariably, everybody in the group that was
first shown the young woman sees a young woman in the abstract drawing,
and those who were shown the old woman see an old woman. Each group was
convinced that it had objectively evaluated the drawing. The point is
that we see things not as they are, but as we are conditioned to see
them. Once we understand the importance of our past conditioning, we can
experience a paradigm shift in the way we see things. To make large
changes in our lives, we must work on the basic paradigms through which
we see the world.
The Character Ethic assumes that there are some absolute
principles that exist in all human beings. Some examples of such
principles are fairness, honesty, integrity, human dignity, quality,
potential, and growth. Principles contrast with practices in that
practices are for specific situations whereas principles have universal
application.
The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People
presents an “inside-out” approach to effectiveness that is centered on
principles and character. Inside-out means that the change starts within
oneself. For many people, this approach represents a paradigm shift
away from the Personality Ethic and toward the Character Ethic.
The Seven Habits – An Overview
Our character is a collection of our habits, and habits
have a powerful role in our lives. Habits consist of knowledge, skill,
and desire. Knowledge allows us to know what to do, skill gives us the
ability to know how to do it, and desire is the motivation to do it.
The Seven Habits move us through the following stages:
- Dependence: the paradigm under which we are born, relying upon others to take care of us.
- Independence: the paradigm under which we can make our own decisions and take care of ourselves.
- Interdependence: the paradigm under which we cooperate to achieve something that cannot be achieved independently.
Much of the success literature today tends to value
independence, encouraging people to become liberated and do their own
thing. The reality is that we are interdependent, and the independent
model is not optimal for use in an interdependent environment that
requires leaders and team players.
To make the choice to become interdependent, one first must
be independent, since dependent people have not yet developed the
character for interdependence. Therefore, the first three habits focus
on self-mastery, that is, achieving the private victories required to
move from dependence to independence. The first three habits are:
- Habit 1: Be Proactive
- Habit 2: Begin with the End in Mind
- Habit 3: Put First Things First
Habits 4, 5, and 6 then address interdependence:
- Habit 4: Think Win/Win
- Habit 5: Seek First to Understand, Then to Be Understood
- Habit 6: Synergize
Finally, the seventh habit is one of renewal and continual
improvement, that is, of building one’s personal production capability.
To be effective, one must find the proper balance between actually
producing and improving one’s capability to produce. Covey illustrates
this point with the fable of the goose and the golden egg.
In the fable, a poor farmer’s goose began laying a solid
gold egg every day, and the farmer soon became rich. He also became
greedy and figured that the goose must have many golden eggs within her.
In order to obtain all of the eggs immediately, he killed the goose.
Upon cutting it open he discovered that it was not full of golden eggs.
The lesson is that if one attempts to maximize immediate production with
no regard to the production capability, the capability will be lost.
Effectiveness is a function of both production and the capacity to
produce.
The need for balance between production and production
capability applies to physical, financial, and human assets. For
example, in an organization the person in charge of a particular machine
may increase the machine’s immediate production by postponing scheduled
maintenance. As a result of the increased output, this person may be
rewarded with a promotion. However, the increased immediate output comes
at the expense of future production since more maintenance will have to
be performed on the machine later. The person who inherits the mess may
even be blamed for the inevitable downtime and high maintenance
expense.
Customer loyalty also is an asset to which the production
and production capability balance applies. A restaurant may have a
reputation for serving great food, but the owner may decide to cut costs
and lower the quality of the food. Immediately, profits will soar, but
soon the restaurant’s reputation will be tarnished, the customer’s trust
will be lost, and profits will decline.
This does not mean that only production capacity is
important. If one builds capacity but never uses it, there will be no
production. There is a balance between building production capacity and
actually producing. Finding the right tradeoff is central to one’s
effectiveness.
The above has been an introduction and overview of the 7 Habits. The following introduces the first habit in Covey’s framework.
FROM DEPENDENCE TO INDEPENDENCE
Habit 1: Be Proactive
A unique ability that sets humans apart from animals is
self-awareness and the ability to choose how we respond to any stimulus.
While conditioning can have a strong impact on our lives, we are not
determined by it. There are three widely accepted theories of
determinism: genetic, psychic, and environmental. Genetic determinism
says that our nature is coded into our DNA, and that our personality
traits are inherited from our grandparents. Psychic determinism says
that our upbringing determines our personal tendencies, and that
emotional pain that we felt at a young age is remembered and affects the
way we behave today. Environmental determinism states that factors in
our present environment are responsible for our situation, such as
relatives, the national economy, etc. These theories of determinism each
assume a model in which the stimulus determines the response.
Viktor Frankl was a Jewish psychiatrist who survived the
death camps of Nazi Germany. While in the death camps, Frankl realized
that he alone had the power to determine his response to the horror of
the situation. He exercised the only freedom he had in that environment
by envisioning himself teaching students after his release. He became an
inspiration for others around him. He realized that in the middle of
the stimulus-response model, humans have the freedom to choose.
Animals do not have this independent will. They respond to a
stimulus like a computer responds to its program. They are not aware of
their programming and do not have the ability to change it. The model
of determinism was developed based on experiments with animals and
neurotic people. Such a model neglects our ability to choose how we will
respond to stimuli.
We can choose to be reactive to our environment. For
example, if the weather is good, we will be happy. If the weather is
bad, we will be unhappy. If people treat us well, we will feel well; if
they don’t, we will feel bad and become defensive. We also can choose to
be proactive and not let our situation determine how we will feel.
Reactive behavior can be a self-fulfilling prophecy. By accepting that
there is nothing we can do about our situation, we in fact become
passive and do nothing.
The first habit of highly effective people is proactivity.
Proactive people are driven by values that are independent of the
weather or how people treat them. Gandhi said, “They cannot take away
our self respect if we do not give it to them.” Our response to what
happened to us affects us more than what actually happened. We can
choose to use difficult situations to build our character and develop
the ability to better handle such situations in the future.
Proactive people use their resourcefulness and initiative
to find solutions rather than just reporting problems and waiting for
other people to solve them.
Being proactive means assessing the situation and
developing a positive response for it. Organizations can be proactive
rather than be at the mercy of their environment. For example, a company
operating in an industry that is experiencing a downturn can develop a
plan to cut costs and actually use the downturn to increase market
share.
Once we decide to be proactive, exactly where we focus our
efforts becomes important. There are many concerns in our lives, but we
do not always have control over them. One can draw a circle that
represents areas of concern, and a smaller circle within the first that
represents areas of control. Proactive people focus their efforts on the
things over which they have influence, and in the process often expand
their area of influence. Reactive people often focus their efforts on
areas of concern over which they have no control. Their complaining and
negative energy tend to shrink their circle of influence.
In our area of concern, we may have direct control,
indirect control, or no control at all. We have direct control over
problems caused by our own behavior. We can solve these problems by
changing our habits. We have indirect control over problems related to
other people’s behavior. We can solve these problems by using various
methods of human influence, such as empathy, confrontation, example, and
persuasion. Many people have only a few basic methods such as fight or
flight. For problems over which we have no control, first we must
recognize that we have no control, and then gracefully accept that fact
and make the best of the situation.
SUMMARY OF THE SEVEN HABITS
Habit 1: Be Proactive
Change starts from within, and highly effective people make
the decision to improve their lives through the things that they can
influence rather than by simply reacting to external forces.
Habit 2: Begin with the End in Mind
Develop a principle-centered personal mission statement.
Extend the mission statement into long-term goals based on personal
principles.
Habit 3: Put First Things First
Spend time doing what fits into your personal mission,
observing the proper balance between production and building production
capacity. Identify the key roles that you take on in life, and make time
for each of them.
Habit 4: Think Win/Win
Seek agreements and relationships that are mutually
beneficial. In cases where a “win/win” deal cannot be achieved, accept
the fact that agreeing to make “no deal” may be the best alternative. In
developing an organizational culture, be sure to reward win/win
behavior among employees and avoid inadvertantly rewarding win/lose
behavior.
Habit 5: Seek First to Understand, Then to Be Understood
First seek to understand the other person, and only then
try to be understood. Stephen Covey presents this habit as the most
important principle of interpersonal relations. Effective listening is
not simply echoing what the other person has said through the lens of
one’s own experience. Rather, it is putting oneself in the perspective
of the other person, listening empathically for both feeling and
meaning.
Habit 6: Synergize
Through trustful communication, find ways to leverage
individual differences to create a whole that is greater than the sum of
the parts. Through mutual trust and understanding, one often can solve
conflicts and find a better solution than would have been obtained
through either person’s own solution.
Habit 7: Sharpen the Saw
Take time out from production to build production capacity
through personal renewal of the physical, mental, social/emotional, and
spiritual dimensions. Maintain a balance among these dimensions.
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