Showing posts with label business. Show all posts
Showing posts with label business. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 29, 2023

A quick summary of the 7 habits of highly effective people.

 









A QUICK SUMMARY OF THE 7 HABITS OF HIGHLY EFFECTIVE PEOPLE

ARTICLE by Elle McFarlane


During his 25 years of working with successful individuals in business, universities, and relationship settings, Stephen Covey discovered that high-achievers were often plagued with a sense of emptiness. In an attempt to understand why, he read several self-improvement, self-help, and popular psychology books written over the past 200 years. It was here that he noticed a stark historical contrast between two types of success. 

Before the First World War, success was attributed to ethics of character. This included characteristics such as humility, fidelity, integrity, courage, and justice. However, after the war, there was a shift to what Covey refers to as the “Personality Ethic.” Here, success was attributed as a function of personality, public image, behaviors, and skills. Yet, these were just shallow, quick successes, overlooking the deeper principles of life.

Covey argues it’s your character that needs to be cultivated to achieve sustainable success, not your personality. What we are says far more than what we say or do. The “Character Ethic” is based upon a series of principles. Covey claims that these principles are self-evident and endure in most religious, social, and ethical systems. They have universal application. When you value the correct principles, you see reality as it truly is. This is the foundation of his bestselling book, The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People.




Covey’s seven habits are composed of the primary principles of character upon which happiness and success are based. The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People puts forward a principle-centered approach to both personal and interpersonal effectiveness. Rather than focusing on altering the outward manifestations of your behavior and attitudes, it aims to adapt your inner core, character, and motives.

The seven habits in this book will help you move from a state of dependence, to independence, and finally to interdependence. While society and most of the self-help books on the market champion independence as the highest achievement, Covey argues that it’s interdependence that yields the greatest results. 

Interdependence is a more mature, advanced concept. It precludes the knowledge that you are an independent being, but that working with others will produce greater results than working on your own. To attain this level of interdependence, you must cultivate each of the seven habits laid out in the book. The seven habits are as follows:

  1. Be proactive
  2. Begin with the end in mind
  3. Put first things first
  4. Think win/win
  5. Seek to understand first, before making yourself understood
  6. Learn to synergize
  7. Sharpen the saw

This 7 Habits of Highly Effective People book summary will look at each of these habits and show you how to put them into action to become more successful in whatever you want to achieve.

Habit 1: Be Proactive

The first and most fundamental habit of an effective person is to be proactive. More than just taking the initiative, being proactive means taking responsibility for your life. Consequently, you don’t blame your behavior on external factors such as circumstances, but own it as part of a conscious choice based on your values. Where reactive people are driven by feelings, proactive people are driven by values.

While external factors have the ability to cause pain, your inner character doesn’t need to be damaged. What matters most is how you respond to these experiences. Proactive individuals focus their efforts on the things they can change, whereas reactive people focus their efforts on the areas of their lives in which they have no control. They amass negative energy by blaming external factors for their feelings of victimization. This, in turn, empowers other forces to perpetually control them.

The clearest manifestation of proactivity can be seen in your ability to stick to the commitments you make to yourself and to others. This includes a commitment to self-improvement and, by extension, personal growth. By setting small goals and sticking to them, you gradually increase your integrity, which increases your ability to take responsibility for your life. Covey suggests undertaking a 30-day proactivity test in which you make a series of small commitments and stick to them. Observe how this changes your sense of self.

Habit 2: Begin With the End in Mind

To better understand this habit, Covey invites you to imagine your funeral. He asks you to think how you would like your loved ones to remember you, what you would like them to acknowledge as your achievements, and to consider what a difference you made in their lives. Engaging in this thought experiment helps you identify some of your key values that should underpin your behavior. 

Accordingly, each day of your life should contribute to the vision you have for your life as a whole. Knowing what is important to you means you can live your life in service of what matters most. Habit two involves identifying old scripts that are taking you away from what matters most, and writing new ones that are congruent with your deepest values. This means that, when challenges arise, you can meet them proactively and with integrity, as your values are clear.

Covey states that the most effective way to begin with the end in mind is to create a personal mission statement. It should focus on the following:

  • What you want to be (character)
  • What you want to do (contributions and achievements)
  • The values upon which both of these things are based

In time, your mission statement will become your personal constitution. It becomes the basis from which you make every decision in your life. By making principles the center of your life, you create a solid foundation from which to flourish. This is similar to the philosophy Ray Dalio presents in his book, Principles. As principles aren’t contingent on external factors, they don’t waver. They give you something to hold on to when times get tough. With a principle-led life, you can adopt a clearer, more objective worldview.

Habit 3: Put First Things First

To begin this chapter, Covey asks you to answer the following questions:

  1. What one thing could you do regularly, that you aren’t currently doing, that would improve your personal life?
  2. Similarly, what one thing could you do to improve your business or professional life?

Whereas habit one encourages you to realize you are in charge of your own life, and habit two is based on the ability to visualize and to identify your key values, habit three is the implementation of these two habits. It focuses on the practice of effective self-management through independent will. By asking yourself the above questions, you become aware that you have the power to significantly change your life in the present.

Thus, having an independent will means you are capable of making decisions and acting on them. How frequently you use your independent will is dependent on your integrity. Your integrity is synonymous with how much you value yourself and how well you keep your commitments. Habit three concerns itself with prioritizing these commitments and putting the most important things first. This means cultivating the ability to say no to things that don’t match your guiding principles. To manage your time effectively in accordance with habit three, your actions must adhere to the following:

  1. They must be principle-centered.
  2. They must be conscience-directed, meaning that they give you the opportunity to organize your life in accordance with your core values.
  3. They define your key mission, which includes your values and long-term goals.
  4. They give balance to your life.
  5. They are organized weekly, with daily adaptations as needed.

The thread that ties all five of these points together is that the focus is on improving relationships and results, not on maximizing your time. This shares sentiments with Tim Ferris who, in The 4-Hour Work Week, argues that time management is a deeply flawed concept.

Habit 4: Think Win/Win

Covey argues that win/win isn’t a technique, it’s a philosophy of human interaction. It’s a frame of mind that seeks out a mutual benefit for all concerned. This means that all agreements or solutions are mutually beneficial, and all parties feel satisfied with the outcome. To embody this mindset, life must be seen as a cooperative, not a competition. Consequently, anything less than a win/win outcome goes against the pursuit of interdependence, which is the most efficient state to be operating within.

Therefore, to adopt a win/win mindset, you must cultivate the habit of interpersonal leadership. This involves exercising each of the following traits when interacting with others:

  • Self-awareness
  • Imagination
  • Conscience
  • Independent will

To be an effective win/win leader, Covey argues that you must embrace five independent dimensions:

  1. Character: This is the foundation upon which a win/win mentality is created, and it means acting with integrity, maturity, and an “abundance mentality” (i.e., there is plenty of everything for everyone, one person’s success doesn’t threaten your success).
  2. Relationships: Trust is essential to achieving win/win agreements. You must nourish your relationships to maintain a high level of trust.
  3. Agreements: This means that the parties involved must agree on the desired results, guidelines, resources, accountability, and the consequences.
  4. Win/win performance agreements and supportive systems: Creating a standardized, agreed-upon set of desired results to measure performance within a system that can support a win/win mindset.
  5. Processes: All processes must allow for win/win solutions to arise.

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

If you want to improve your interpersonal relations, Covey argues that you must endeavor to understand a situation before attempting to make yourself understood. The ability to communicate clearly is essential for your overall effectiveness, as it’s the most important skill you can train. While you spend years learning to read, write, and speak, Covey states that little focus is given to training the skill of listening.

If your principles are solid, you’ll naturally want to engage and listen to people without making them feel manipulated. Consequently, it’s through your character that you transmit and communicate what type of a person you are. Through it, people will come to instinctively trust and open up to you. While most people listen with the intent of replying, the proficient listener will listen with the intent to understand. This is known as the skill of empathic listening.

An empathic listener can get into the frame of reference of the person speaking. By doing so, they see the world as they do and feel things the way they feel. Empathic listening, therefore, allows you to get a clearer picture of reality. When you begin to listen to people with the intent of understanding them, you’ll be astounded at how quickly they will open up.

Once you think you’ve understood the situation, the next step is to make yourself understood. This requires courage. By using what you’ve learned from empathic listening, you can communicate your ideas in accordance with your listener’s paradigms and concerns. This increases the credibility of your ideas, as you will be speaking in the same language as your audience.

Habit 6: Synergize

When synergy is operating at its fullest, it incorporates the desire to reach win/win agreements with empathic communication. It’s the essence of principle-centered leadership. It unifies and unleashes great power from people, as it’s based on the tenant that the whole is greater than the sum of its parts. The real challenge is to apply principles of synergetic creative cooperation into your social interactions. Covey argues that such instances of synergetic interpersonal group collaboration are often neglected but should be part of your daily life.

At its core, synergy is a creative process that requires vulnerability, openness, and communication. It means balancing the mental, emotional, and psychological differences between a group of people and, in doing so, creating new paradigms of thought between the group members. This is where creativity is maximized. Synergy is effectiveness as an interdependent reality. This involves teamwork, team building, and the creation of unity with other human beings.

Habit 7: Sharpen the Saw

This seventh habit is all about enhancing yourself through the four dimensions of renewal:

  1. Physical: Exercise, nutrition, and stress management. This means caring for your physical body, eating right, getting enough sleep, and exercising regularly.
  2. Social/emotional: Service, empathy, synergy, and intrinsic security. This provides you with a feeling of security and meaning.
  3. Spiritual: Value clarification and commitment, study, and meditation. In focusing on this area of your life, you get closer to your center and your inner value system.
  4. Mental: Reading, visualizing, planning, and writing. To continually educate yourself means expanding your mind. This is essential for effectiveness.

To “sharpen the saw” means to express and exercise all four of these motivations regularly and consistently. This is the most important investment you can make in your life, as you are the instrument of your performance. It’s essential to tend to each area with balance, as to overindulge in one area means to neglect another. 

However, a positive effect of sharpening your saw in one dimension is that it has a knock-on positive effect in another, due to them being interrelated. For instance, by focusing on your physical health, you inadvertently improve your mental health, too. This, in turn, creates an upward spiral of growth and change that helps you to become increasingly self-aware. Moving up the spiral means you must learn, commit, and do increasingly more as you move upwards and progressively become a more efficient individual.

You can buy The 7 Habits of Effective People by Stephen R. Covey on Amazon

.







Need a Career Coach?

 Click here to get a free Zoom session with Suhair.          


Tuesday, February 7, 2023

6 Ways to Work Smarter Not Harder

 


6 Ways to Work Smarter Not Harder


The phrase work smarter not harder could have a different meaning for everyone. After researching this phrase, I discovered the term originated in the 1930's by Allen F. Morgenstern. As an industrial engineer, he created a work simplification program to increase productivity using less effort.

There are differing opinions on this idea, some agree, while others don't. These opinions come from the perspective of each person. My perspective, or opinion, leans the way of agreement in the phrase, work smarter not harder. Allow me to explain.

In the past I wrote an article titled 'Why I Say Professional Organizers Are Lazy'. The gist of this article speaks to the term work smarter not harder. In the article I explain why I say that. In a nutshell, professional organizers find ways to complete tasks with the least amount of effort.

Everyone has their own ways of doing things, and as I've said in the past, what works for one may not work for another. Finding ways to work smarter not harder based on your specific lifestyle requires some internal investigation.

Think about the ways that you work on projects and tasks, both professionally and personally. Then look at the list below to see if any of these ways will work for you. Including ways to work smarter not harder will allow you to get things done easily and consequently reduce your stress in the process.

Get Organized

Naturally this way would be first on the list! When all of your things are organized, you can find what you need quickly. You don't waste time looking for required items to work on a task or project. Your spaces are clear and there is no clutter to distract you from thinking clearly.

Brain Dump

You probably have a lot of things swirling around in your head. Do a brain dump by getting them out of your head and onto a piece of paper, or if you're electronically inclined, on your computer or phone. Knowing what you need to do is the first step.

To-do List

Now that you understand what you want to get done, put those tasks on a to-do list. You may have more than one list. I know that many will tell you not to do that but sometimes it's necessary. For example, you may have one list for work and another list for home. That's OK, it's less confusing that way. At this point you want to prioritize the tasks on your list(s).

Processes

Using processes is a great way to work smarter not harder. I am a huge fan of using processes for repetitive tasks. Whether it's work related or personally, everyone has repetitive tasks of some sort.

When you put a process together by listing the steps, and referring to the process each time you perform the task, it will become a routine or a habit and you get things done quicker.

But don't become complacent and stop referring to these processes, or you take the risk of forgetting a step. It may not seem like a big deal, but it may cost time and/or money, and in the professional realm may be detrimental to your career.

Eliminate Steps

This is a good way to streamline processes. As you work a process and the situation changes, tweak the process to adapt to the change. This may occur in the way of eliminating a step or steps in the process. By eliminating a step, the consequence is likely to save time. Be mindful though, not to sacrifice quality in your quest to streamline a process.

Schedule Everything

This point is probably the most effective way to work smarter not harder. When you schedule all tasks, projects and appointments, there is no question when and what you should be doing at any given time.

Use your prioritized to-do list to schedule all tasks and appointments, either in a paper planner or an electronic device. Check your paper planner frequently, or set up audible alerts on your electronic device to stay on schedule.

Factor in additional time for travel, or unexpected things that may pop up. Downtime also needs to be factored in to your busy schedule. Downtime is not wasted time, it's a time to regroup, relax and refresh to achieve an effective work smarter not harder strategy.


Article Source: https://EzineArticles.com/expert/Sally_E_Morgan/680809


Need a Career Coach?

 Click here to get a free Zoom session with Suhair.


Sunday, January 22, 2023

How To Build A Business That Works | Brian Tracy


 Brian Tracy is Chairman and CEO of Brian Tracy International, a company specializing in the training and development of individuals and organizations. Brian's goal is to help you achieve your personal and business #goals faster and easier than you ever imagined.

Brian Tracy has consulted for more than 1,000 companies and addressed more than 5,000,000 people in 5,000 talks and seminars throughout the US, Canada, and 55 other countries worldwide. As a Keynote speaker and seminar leader, he addresses more than 250,000 people each year. He speaks to corporate and public audiences on the subjects of Personal and Professional Development, including the executives and staff of many of America's largest corporations. His exciting talks and seminars on #Leadership, Selling, Self-Esteem, Goals, #Strategy, Creativity, and Success Psychology bring about immediate changes and long-term results.

براين تريسي هو رئيس مجلس الإدارة والرئيس التنفيذي لشركة Brian Tracy International، وهي شركة متخصصة في تدريب وتطوير الأفراد والمنظمات. هدف برايان هو مساعدة الأشخاص على تحقيق أهدافهم الشخصية والتجارية بشكل أسرع وأسهل مما يتخيلون.

قدم براين تريسي أكثر من 1000 شركة وخاطب أكثر من 5,000,000 شخص في أكثر من 5000 لقاء وندوة في مختلف أنحاء الولايات المتحدة وكندا و 55 دولة أخرى حول العالم. بصفته متحدثًا رئيسيًا وقائدًا، فإنه يخاطب أكثر من 250.000 شخص كل عام.

يتحدث تريسي حول موضوعات التطوير الشخصي والمهني، بما في ذلك المديرين التنفيذيين وموظفي العديد من أكبر الشركات الأمريكية. تؤدي محادثاته وندواته المثيرة حول #القيادة والبيع واحترام الذات والأهداف و #الاستراتيجية والإبداع وسيكولوجية النجاح إلى تغييرات فورية ونتائج طويلة المدى.

Need a Career Coach?
 Click here to get a free Zoom session with Suhair.

Sunday, January 8, 2023

Strategies to become more emotional intelligent | Daniel Goleman

 



How can emotional intelligence help us be better leaders? Are we really aware of how we manage ourselves and our relationships? In this video, Daniel Goleman explains the best strategies to improve our emotional intelligence to create better long-term relationships.


Need a Career Coach?
 Click here to get a free Zoom session with Suhair.

Monday, December 26, 2022

The surprising habits of original thinkers | Adam Grant


 "Procrastination is a vice when it comes to productivity but it can be a virtue with creativity."

"To be original you don't have to be first, you just need to be different and better"


Need a coach?

 Click here to get a free Zoom session with Suhair 


Sunday, December 25, 2022

SIMON SINEK - Why Leaders Eat Last?


 Simon Sinek explores how leaders can inspire cooperation, trust and change. He's the author of the classic "Start With Why" and "Why Leaders Eat Last?."






Need a coach?
 Click here to get a free Zoom session with Suhair 

Sunday, December 18, 2022

The Six Question Process: Coaching For Leaders

 



Have a 1:1 dialogue with each of your direct reports and ask these questions:

1. Where are we going? 2. Where are you going? 3. What do you think you’re doing well? 4. If you were coaching you what advice would you give yourself? 5. How can I help? 6. What suggestions do you have for me to be a better manager?



Need a coach?
 Click here to get a free Zoom session with Suhair 

Saturday, December 17, 2022

What Got You Here Won't Get You There: How successful people become even more successful



Summary by: Marta Brzosko

Marshall Goldsmith has been coaching some of America’s most influential leaders and CEOs for over 30 years. He’s earned himself a reputation of being the best in his field. 

Goldsmith recognizes that plenty of leaders hold on to awful character traits and unhelpful behaviors. This is additionally reinforced by the common opinions about successful people as being competitive, self-obsessed and even obnoxious. But at some point, these characteristics usually get in the way of leaders and executives having even more success.

This book is a much-needed reality check for those high up on the corporate ladder. If you already are a successful leader, such a paradigm shift may be precisely what you need.

Here are 3 lessons that can help top leaders see through the blind spots in their perception:

  1. People often succeed despite their flaws – but believe that they did because of them.
  2. Avoiding mistakes should be celebrated as an important part of growth.
  3. At the top, it is all about helping others shine. 

If you are ready to open your eyes to what’s holding you back – this book is just right for you.


  Click here to get a free Zoom session with Suhair Alhaj







Friday, December 9, 2022

Failure Is Part of Success: Eduardo Zanatta at TEDxBYU

 



  Click here to get a free intake session on zoom with Suhair 

Dealing with failure in your career

Life is full of surprises and some are good and some are not so good. It is all going to depend on the way that you think and what you do to make it positive.  Failure is one problem that we all have to deal with at some time or another.  There are going to be issues that we have to work at and deal with as we go.  Failure is part of that learning lesson.


Dealing with failure and your career is something that you need to handle with care.  When you are not using all of your abilities to the best you will see that it is hard to be a successful part of life. Making all of your career dreams come true is something that you must work hard at not matter what.


Dealing with something that goes wrong at work can be hard. You have to think about the way that you want to handle it all.  You have to make sure that you are professional about it all and using all of your skills to turn it around.  Failure does not have to be something that goes on forever. You can change your luck and make things easier to deal with.  


There are ways that you can change the failure that happens in your life.  Many people like to take courses and classes on how to improve their skills in for their career. This can lead in many people furthering their education and getting the promotion that they have always dreamed about.  Going to school to get another degree is something that you can be proud of and help you deal with any type of failure that comes your way.


Some people realize that their career is not the right path for them. They have chosen something that they have failed at and they can no longer deal with the pressures that go on. Having something that they can fall back on and learn from is a great experience and one that can bring more positive things later in life. Changing the way that you think will be a great advantage to everything else that you do. It can make you a better and stronger person that can handle the failures that come your way.


The way that you make your living should make you happy. If you are not happy with this lifestyle then maybe you should think about doing something else.  You should be thinking of another type of career path that would make you happy. We all make bad choices about what we do for a living but if we decide to do something about it we can make a difference.  Using our skills to change the way that that we live can also be a rewarding experience as well.


Finding out about ourselves and what we do can make a positive impact on how we life our life. Using what we have learned about ourselves and everything else can help us deal with the any type of failure in our career or with lie in general. It can all be fixed with the right type of help and a little patience.  Remember that life is too short to focus in on the negative and any failures that we may have had.  If we try and pursue a happy and healthy career that makes us happy, we will be better people in the end.  


Figure out a way to use failure to gain more control over your life and all that you do to make yourself feel more confident for future goals that you set. 


 

Suhair Alhaj,

Executive/Career Coach

  Click here to get a free intake session on zoom with Suhair 

Thinking fast and slow by Daniel Kahneman

  Thinking Fast And Slow Summary By: Niklas Goeke Say what you will, they don’t hand out the Nobel prize for economics like it’s a slice of ...