The Compound Effect: Book Overview From The Publisher
The Compound Effect: Book Overview From The Publisher
The Compound Effect: Book Overview From The Publisher
Darren Hardy
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Watching educational videos Watching sitcoms
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Why is it that when the train is initially starting to move, it can be stopped with just a 1-inch
wide piece of wood, but when it has been running, it is able to ram through a 5-feet wall of
concrete?
The difference of course is momentum. Massive momentum.
3) Tracking
How can we stop wasting time and become highly effective?
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The answer is tracking. And not only is this technique good in helping us make use of our time
well, it is also good for improving any behavior in any area of our lives. Whether it’s with
exercise, money, or food whatever you’re going after, you can improve your behavior with
tracking.
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Do it for 3 weeks to see the real effects of this tracking. You'll be astonished with how you're
wasting your time and how well you start using your time.
4) Associations
Associations are one of the most powerful ways in which the compound effect works in our life.
As Jim Rohn, the great personal development guru, said:
We are the average of the 5 people we spend the most time with.
In every area of your life, you are the average of the 5 people you spend most of your time with.
So if you spend your time with positive, uplifting people who are going somewhere in life, you
are growing up in life as well. If you spend it with negative people, your life will move in the
wrong direction.
If you look at the average income of the 5 people you spend the most time with, you'll see that
you are somewhere in that neighborhood as well.
EXERCISE:
Here's a really simple but powerful exercise you can do to start making changes in your
associations.
● Make a list of all the people you associate with on a daily, weekly, monthly basis.
● Now make 3 separate lists.
a. Disassociations - People we need to stop associating with because they're
actually pulling us down
b. Limited associations - People we need to have limited engagement with. These
are the people whom we can spend a few hours or a few days with but we
cannot spend a lot of time with.
c. Expanded associations - Your most powerful group of associations. These are
the people you need to spend more time with, the people in your life who will
actually move you up in life.
So make these 3 lists of the people in your life and start evaluating your time use according to
these lists.
As David McClelland of Harvard University said:
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95% of our success comes as a result of the people we associate with.
That’s a huge part of our success. So it's a really powerful idea. The associations we have will
change the trajectory of our lives, whether up or down.
Related Books:
● The 80/20 Principle
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