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Slaw (Free subscription) | 11/05/2009
Steven Covey is addressing the Drucker Institute live on the web: http://www.drucker100.com/ Not sure if it will be available afterwards. Thanks Dave Bilinsky for the link.
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Salt Lake Tribune (Free subscription) | 11/05/2009
Steven R. Covey, author of several books that include The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People , will be inducted Nov. 14 into the hall of fame of the Utah Valley Entrepreneurial Forum.
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Knowledge Jolt with Jack (Free subscription) | 11/25/2009
... The Urgent / Important distinction should be familiar to anyone who has paid attention to Steven Covey (or any business writing on prioritization and time management). I really like the focus of this article on limiting the amount of work, though I would suggest that leaders have to limit all work in process, rather than strictly the urgent and important quadrant of work. The idea...
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Balanced Existence (Free subscription) | 11/24/2009
... What’s Urgent, & What’s Neither The difference between ‘urgent’ and ‘important’ is vital. Steven Covey, in his famous book The Seven Habits of Highly Effective people, writes about this at some length. Some things are urgent and must be dealt with immediately – the baby is crying, there’s been an accident, the deadline is in ten minutes. Of the remaining tasks, some are important...
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Newsday (Free subscription) | 11/19/2009
... many tend to forget – a customer will always be able to acquire goods that meet their needs. As Steven Covey said, “Start with the end in mind.” Strategic foresight is based on the principle of planning from the future back to the present, not the typical approach of planning from the present towards the future. This approach (which some call backcasting) focuses on developing a coherent...
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A Very Foolish Plan (Free subscription) | 11/13/2009
... a seasonal rotation of whatever these guys can get their hands on. At the moment, everyone's got Steven Covey's 'The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People', 'The Idea of Justice' by Armartya Sen and 'The Lost Symbol' by Dan Brown. So I suppose, unless the free-marketeers have lied to us, there must be a colossal demand in Dhaka for re-packaged ancient wisdom, obscure-but-brilliant...