與成功有約
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與成功有約 | |
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副标题 | Lua错误 在Module:Wikidata的第446行:attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value) |
作者 | Stephen R. Covey |
主题 | Self help |
故事时代背景 | Lua错误 在Module:WikidataIB的第759行:attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value) |
發行信息 | |
首次刊载处 | Lua错误 在Module:Wikidata的第446行:attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value) |
編輯 | Lua错误 在Module:Wikidata的第446行:attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value) |
出版机构 | Free Press |
出版時間 | 1989 |
所获奖项 | Lua错误 在Module:Wikidata的第446行:attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value) |
系列作品 | |
下一部作品 | The 8th Habit: From Effectiveness to Greatness |
规范控制 | |
ISBN | ISBN 0-7432-6951-9 15th annv. paper |
OCLC | Lua错误 在Module:Wikidata的第446行:attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value) |
與成功有約, 在1989年第一次出版,是一本自己帮手书,由 Stephen Covey 写。共在38种语言卖出15千万本。书里的7原则,如果把它变成习惯,会使人成功。作者称这是吧自己和“真北” aligning oneself to what he calls "true north"—principles of a character ethic that, unlike values, he believes to be universal and timeless.
书非常受欢迎,作者也应此可以做昂贵的公开演讲。 The book was enormously popular, and catapulted Covey into lucrative public-speaking appearances and workshops. He has also written a number of follow-up books, such as Power of the Seven Habits, Seven Habits of Highly Effective Families, and Beyond the Seven Habits. A sequel to The Seven Habits is The 8th Habit: From Effectiveness to Greatness published in 2004. Also, Sean Covey (Stephen's son) has written a version for teens: The Seven Habits of Highly Effective Teens. This version simplifies the 7 Habits for younger readers to better understand them. In October 2006 Sean Covey also published "The 6 Most Important Decisions You Will Ever Make, a Guide for Teens" that highlights key times in the life of a teen and gives advice on how to deal with them. His oldest son, Stephen M.R. Covey has written a book titled "The Speed of Trust".
A course based on The Seven Habits is offered through FranklinCovey and at many corporations and government agencies such as the Regional Community Policing Institute-California, (www.rcpi-ca.org), United States Department of Homeland Security's Federal Law Enforcement Training Center. [1]
A Principled Approach
Throughout the book Covey points to principles as the focus. The book presents the principles as an approach rather than a set of behaviors. The book imparts the principles in four sections.
- Paradigms and Principles: the basic foundation for the creation of the habits.
- Private Victory: the first three habits intended to take a person from dependence to independence, or one's ability to be self-reliant. You must be able to win your private victories before you can start on your public victories. If you start to win your public victories first, how can you feel good about yourself and still work on habits.
- Public Victory: habits four through six lead to interdependence, the ability to align one's needs and desires with those of other people and create effective relationships.
- Renewal: directs the reader to begin a process of self-improvement.
The Seven Habits
The chapters are dedicated to each of the habits, which are represented by the following imperatives:
- Be Proactive. Here, Covey emphasizes the original sense of the term "reactive" as coined by Victor Frankl. You can either be proactive or reactive when it comes to how you act about certain things. Being "proactive" means taking responsibility for everything in life. When you're reactive, you blame other people and circumstances for obstacles or problems. Initiative, and taking action will then follow. Covey shows how man is different from other animals in that he has self-consciousness. He has the ability to detach himself and observe his own self, think about his thoughts. He goes on to say how this attribute enables him. It gives him the power not to be affected by his circumstances. Covey talks about 'Stimulus and Response'. Between Stimulus and Response, we have the power of free will to choose our response.
- Begin with the End In Mind. This chapter is about setting long-term goals based on "true-north principles." Covey recommends to formulate a "personal vision statement" to document one's perception of one's own vision in life. He sees visualization as an important tool to develop this. He also deals with organizational vision statements, which he claims to be more effective if developed and supported by all members of an organization, rather than being prescribed.
- Put First Things First. Here, Covey describes a framework for prioritizing work that is aimed at short-term goals, at the expense of tasks that appear not to be urgent, but are in fact very important. Delegation is presented as an important part of time management. Successful delegation, according to Covey, focuses on results and benchmarks that are to be agreed in advance, rather than on prescribing detailed work plans.
- Think Win/Win describes an attitude whereby mutually beneficial solutions are sought, that satisfy the needs of oneself, or, in the case of a conflict, both parties involved.
- Seek First to Understand, Then to be Understood. Covey warns that giving out advice before having empathetically understood a person and their situation will likely result in that advice being rejected. Thoroughly reading out your own autobiography will decrease the chance of establishing a working communication.
- Synergize describes a way of working in teams. Apply effective problem solving. Apply collaborative decision making. Value differences. Build on divergent strengths. Leverage creative collaboration. Embrace and leverage innovation. It is put forth that, when this is pursued as a habit, the result of the teamwork will exceed the sum of what each of the members could have achieved on their own. “The whole is greater than the sum of its parts.”
- Sharpen the saw focuses on balanced self-satisfaction. Regaining what Covey calls "production capability" by engaging in carefully selected recreational activities.
Related books by Covey
- Principle Centered Leadership, published in 1992 (ISBN 0-671-79280-6).
- First Things First, co-authored with Roger and Rebecca Merrill, published in 1994 (ISBN 0-684-80203-1).
- Living the Seven Habits, published in 2000 (ISBN 0-684-85716-2).
- The 8th Habit: From Effectiveness to Greatness, published in 2004 (ISBN 0-684-84665-9).
External links
- Official FranklinCovey homepage
- Complete article detailing each of the habits
- Workshop information on The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People
- Information on The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People Personal Coaching
- 2007 "Time Management" lecture by Randy Pausch (full Video | hi-res downloadable version | Lecture slides)