The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People Combo
The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People Combo
The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People Combo
of Highly Effective
People
A life philosophy by Stephen
Covey
The 7 Habits
1. Be Proactive
2. Begin with the End in Mind
3. Put First Things First
4. Think Win-Win
5. Seek First to Understand, Then to be
Understood
6. Synergize
7. Sharpen the Saw
Habit #1
Be Proactive
• Be aware of yourself, your strengths,
weaknesses, blind spots, motivations – and be
proactive in finding out as much as you can
about yourself. Then be proactive in applying
that knowledge to your relations with others.
• Taking responsibility for your choices and the
subsequent consequences that follow.
• Getting things done.
Habit #2
Begin with
the End in Mind
• Create and live by a personal mission statement.
This may lead onto more specific goals and
objectives, but the idea is that you try to live as
the sort of person you’d like to be remembered
for when you’ve passed on.
• Predict outcomes and then think of worst case
scenarios, will help come up with informed
decisions.
• What is the ultimate goal (both small and large
scale)?
Habit #3
Put First Things First
• Define what it is that really matters in your life,
then spend your time on those important
things. Rather than spreading our time thinly
across too many activities, concentrate on
doing a few things well.
• Planning, prioritizing, and executing your
week's tasks based on importance rather than
urgency.
• Being proactive rather than being reactive
leads to success.
Habit #4
Think Win-Win
• Not an original phrase, but in all your
dealings with others, aim for each
little negotiation to provide success (a
win) for both sides.
• Everyone will feel inclusive and
involved.
• A better environment of trust and
loyalty establishes.
Habit #5
Seek First to Understand, Then to
Be Understood
• In your communications, be sure you know the other
person’s point of view before you start expounding your
own ideas.
• Compels others to reciprocate empathetic listening and
take an open mind to being influenced by you.
• This creates an atmosphere of caring, respect, and
positive problem solving.
• This can also avoid situations where the problem does
not actually exist and its just a matter of
misunderstanding.
• It is always said that listen double to what you talk since
we have 2 ears to listen and one mouth to talk.
Habit #6
Synergize
• Look for ways to take your ideas and other people’s
ideas and build on them together, on the basis that the
outcome will be something greater than the sum of the
inputs.
• Combining the strengths of people through positive
teamwork, so as to achieve goals no one person could
have done alone.
• How to yield the most prolific performance out of a group
of people through encouraging meaningful contribution,
and modeling inspirational and supportive leadership.
• Everyone is a master of something and not everything.
• Positive potentials can be put together to achieve better
results.
Habit #7
Sharpen the Saw
• Sharpening the saw is about renewing yourself
– physically, mentally, spiritually and
emotionally.
• The balancing and renewal of your resources,
energy, and health to create a sustainable
long-term effective lifestyle.
• This is constant improvement of one's self in
order to be a better human being and to
sharpen one's skills in order to achieve better
results.
The 7 Habits
are Based on Paradigms
&
Principles
Paradigms
• Frame of reference
• Assumption
• Influenced by our experiences
• The world is not as it is, it is as we are
conditioned to see it
• It’s all about perspective
• Make minor changes = attitudes and
behaviors
• Make significant changes = reexamine basic
paradigms/the way we view ourselves and
the world around us
Paradigms
Did people act the way you expected them to? What did
you think about their actions?
1. Continuous Learning
2. Service
3. Staying Positive & Optimistic
4. Affirmation of Others
5. Balance
6. Spontaneity & Serendipity
7. Consistent Self Renewal & Self
Improvement
Principle Questions
• Effective habits –
internalized principles
and patterns of
behavior
• The intersection of
knowledge, skill and
desire
– Knowledge = what to do
and why
– Skill = how to do
– Desire = want to do
(motivation)
Habit Questions
Think of two habits you
have, one good and one
bad. In the space below,
write down the knowledge,
skills and desires connected
with those two habits.