Habit 3: Put First Things First
A chapter summary from The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People by Stephen R. Covey.
“The compound result is exhaustion plus the slow erosion of everything that mattered in habit 2 but never demanded immediate attention.”
Covey's time-management quadrant is the practical core of this habit. Activities sort into four buckets: urgent and important (crises, deadlines), important but not urgent (planning, prevention, relationship-building, real work on the things in habit 2), urgent but not important (interruptions, some meetings, some emails), and neither urgent nor important (most of what fills idle hours).
Most people live in quadrants 1 and 3 — putting out fires that demand attention and responding to noise that demands nothing. The compound result is exhaustion plus the slow erosion of everything that mattered in habit 2 but never demanded immediate attention.
The habit is to systematically invest more time in quadrant 2 — the important-but-not-urgent — even when quadrants 1 and 3 are screaming. Because quadrant 2 is where the work that prevents future fires happens, growth in quadrant 2 eventually shrinks quadrant 1 too.
Practically: schedule quadrant 2 first, before the week begins, in protected blocks. The thing you want to keep getting better at won't survive on the leftover time after the urgent stuff. There is no leftover time.
The engine of the matrix is Quadrant II: the important but not urgent. Most people are run by urgency, living reactively in Quadrant I (genuine crises and deadlines) and, worse, in Quadrant III (urgent but unimportant interruptions that merely feel pressing). The effective shrink Quadrant I over time by investing in Quadrant II: prevention, planning, relationship-building, renewal, and the very work of Habits 1 through 3. The paradox is that the activities most responsible for effectiveness are the ones that never shout, so they are perpetually postponed.
Doing more of Quadrant II requires saying no, and Covey is blunt that you can only say no to the merely urgent when you have a deeper, burning yes inside you, supplied by your mission. The practical discipline is weekly rather than daily organizing: schedule around the handful of roles you occupy and the few goals that matter in each, then fit the rest of the week around those big rocks. Daily to-do lists, by contrast, keep you efficient at whatever is in front of you regardless of importance.
He closes with delegation, the highest-leverage move in management. Gofer delegation dictates each step and keeps you the bottleneck; stewardship delegation agrees on desired results, guidelines, resources, accountability, and consequences, then lets the person choose the method. It produces people who manage themselves, which is the only way to multiply your time rather than merely spend it.
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