Search Advanced SearchView Cart   Checkout   
 Location:  Home » esoterica » Covey, Stephen R. » Seven Habits of Highly Effective People  
Categories
music
h.r. giger
vampire: masquerade
esoterica
apparel
video
body art - tattoo
jewelry
HALLOWEEN
women's boots
men's boots
Info
about us
links
posters
Related Categories
• Covey, Stephen R.
( C )
Authors, A-Z
Seven Habits of Highly Effective People
Author: Stephen R. Covey
Publisher: Books On Tape
Category: Book


This item is no longer available

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 811 reviews
Sales Rank: 3872062

Media: Audio Cassette
Number Of Items: 1

ISBN: 5553888824
EAN: 9785553888824
ASIN: 5553888824

Publication Date: December 1991

Also Available In:

  • Paperback - The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People
  • Hardcover - Seven Habits of Highly Effective People
  • Hardcover - Seven Habits of Highly Effective People: Restoring the Character Ethic
  • Audio Cassette - The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People
  • Paperback - Seven Habits of Highly Effective People
  • Paperback - The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People ('Yu cheng gong you yue', in traditional Chinese, NOT in English)
  • Audio Download - The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People
  • Audio Download - The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People: Powerful Lessons in Personal Change (Unabridged)
  • Paperback - The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People: Powerful Lessons in Personal Change
  • Audio CD - 7 Habits Of Highly Effective People
  • Audio Cassette - The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People
  • Paperback - The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People
  • Paperback - Seven Habits of Highly Effective People
  • Hardcover - The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People: Powerful Lessons in Personal Change
  • Calendar - The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People Calendar 2000
  • Hardcover - The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People: Restoring the Character Ethic (G K Hall Large Print Reference Collection)
  • Cards - The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People (50 card deck)
  • Paperback - Seven Habits of Highly Effective People
  • Audio Cassette - The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People
  • Audio Cassette - The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People
  • Audio CD - The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People
  • Audio Cassette - The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People
  • Audio CD - The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People
  • Audio Cassette - Seven Habits of Highly Effective People/Cassettes
  • Unknown Binding - Seven habits of highly effective people
  • Library Binding - Seven Habits of Highly Effective People: Powerful Lessons in Personal Change

Similar Items:

  • How to Win Friends & Influence People
  • The 8th Habit: From Effectiveness to Greatness: Miniature Edition
  • Good to Great: Why Some Companies Make the Leap... and Others Don't
  • The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People Personal Workbook
  • Who Moved My Cheese?: An Amazing Way to Deal with Change in Your Work and in Your Life

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com Review
Anyone who thinks the audiocassette adaptation of Stephen Covey's bestseller, The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People, is a shortcut to reading the book has another thing coming. As a preview, the cassette is worth every one of its 90 minutes; as a substitute for the original, it will only leave you wishing for the rest. There's a reason 7 Habits has sold more than 5 million copies and been translated into 32 languages. Serious work has obviously gone into it, and serious change can likely come out of it--but only with constant discipline and steadfast commitment. As the densely packed tape makes immediately clear, this is no quick fix for what's ailing us in our personal and professional lives.

The tape opens to the silky-smooth, overtrained voice of the female narrator, who's responsible for tying together audio clips from actual Covey seminars. Leaving aside the occasional attempts at promoting Covey and his institute, her script does a first-rate job of making sense of Covey's own intense, analogy-rich style of explaining his habits. There's nothing simple about his approach to becoming an effective person. The first three habits alone--which have to do with personal responsibility, leadership, and self-management--could take years to master. Yet the last four are unattainable, the narrator insists, if you can't acquire the personal security--the "inner core," says Covey--that presumably comes from a mastery of the foundation.

Throughout our lessons, Covey's presence is both learned and thoroughly appealing. He drops references to the likes of Socrates, T.S. Eliot, and Robert Frost with the aplomb of an English professor. And his knack for mixing everyday stories with abstract concepts manages to clarify difficult issues while respecting our intelligence. You could argue that the cassette is nothing more than a clever marketing tool for selling another few million copies of the book. But, even at that, it's worth the investment in time and concentration: in the end, we're moved to learn more about integrating all seven habits in our struggle to become better and, yes, more effective people. (Running time: 1.5 hours, one cassette) --Ann Senechal

Product Description
In The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People, author Stephen R. Covey presents a holistic, integrated, principle-centered approach for solving personal and professional problems. With penetrating insights and pointed anecdotes, Covey reveals a step-by-step pathway for living with fairness, integrity, honesty, and human dignity -- principles that give us the security to adapt to change and the wisdom and power to take advantage of the opportunities that change creates.




Customer Reviews:   Read 806 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Proven Success Strategies.   August 4, 1999
 201 out of 243 found this review helpful

If it's true that strategies are like recipes, then this wonderful book by Stephen Covey holds the recipe for success. A key word right in the title is "habit" not The 7 "suggestions", it's the 7 "habits" When you take success strategies and turn them into everyday practiced habits, you get results.I've read the negative reviews and can only assume that Dr. Coveys detractors either don't have the ability or desire or the discipline to practice habits. Perhaps if Dr Covey chaged the title of this book to "7 seconds to achieve ultimate success without effort" they would have liked this book more. Other books I recommed are "Life Strategies" by McGraw and "SuperSelf" by Givens. Great books.


5 out of 5 stars A MASTER PIECE IN PERSONAL DEVELOPMENT!   July 16, 1998
 199 out of 226 found this review helpful

Dr Covey has put together one of the best works ever. The key word in the title is "habits", no thinking about, setting goals to do something, swishing or anchoring yourself, but actually developing habits and actually doing it.

I've read this book several times and I get something new out of it every time. The only other self development book that helped me this much (I've read them all) is "THINK & GROW RICH" by Napolean Hill I also highly recommend "BUSINESS BUY THE BIBLE" and "DON'T SET GOALS" by Wade Cook. These books are very much in the tradition of "SEVEN HABITS".

To me, this book is not only "not over rated" as one reader indicated, I believe that it is grossly under rated and arguably is the best self development book on the book racks right now!


1 out of 5 stars The trouble with self help book and this one.   March 9, 2001
 147 out of 226 found this review helpful

I would like to say a few things about this book and the "genre", the category it fits in, the self help books in general, mainly because each text is a product of its format and its style greatly influences its content.

As with many, if not all, so called self help books this book is marred the following key problems or flaws:

1. It states and then repeats over and over again, overemphasizing to the point of tedium, the obvious and the common sense wisdom, failing to capture the finer details of the proposed subject and thus missing out on all the important variations of life. In this way it midguides the reader, forcing them to believe that the theory is the life they live in and that the map is indeed the territory.

2. It uses in mostly anecdotal (i.e. incidental) evidence and no scientific, philosophical, literary or other basis as a foundation and is thus very unreliable in the information it provides and can only justify its title (i.e. that it is actually helpful for oneself) if the reader accepts the whole system of thought and frame of mind of the author, his beliefs and values, his or her personal history and assigned meaning in life etc, otherwise it is useless. Missing out on the finer details as i mentioned in the first point i made, these book actually demand that the person replicates his or her self as an offshoot of the writer, allowing for little variety and imagination, and creative spirit, in life. The "wisdom" one can possess after reading such books can be found elsewhere in a more scientific and sinsere manner. Which brings me on to my next point.

3. These types of books are full of misconceptions and oversimplifications of psychological, philosophical, religious and otherwise spiritual works. They gratuitously ransack the good library books from their knowledge and wisdom and, with no references, they go about incorporating these elements to their own writing with different name tags or slightly modified content. Hence, the skill to read and understand any form of printed material, ranging from literature to poetry and from philosophy to science, and being able to adjust these skills to the text one is reading, becomes renamed as speed reading and most recently mutates to kevin treudau's ( i don't know if i 've spelt the name correctly) photoreading. Hypnosis skills get a yuppie make-over and turn into nlp, or some new age crap.

4. Most of them attempt to change the readers mind frame with positive hypnosis and affirmations and do not provide a long lasting effect so to speak, so it is not the info they provide that causes any effect one might have but the influence it exerts on the reader

5. Lastly, and this is a key point I am trying to make here, they are nothing but huge public relations enterprises, as other reviewers have mentioned before me, with the sole purpose of making the author rich and famous and his or her books best-sellers.

There are plenty other flaws one can point out but I 'll stay with these due to the lack of time and space.

About this book in particular. It is priviled enough to have each and every one of the above errors and a few unique ones. First of all, the author is in many cases patronising and bosses the reader around into believing his claims. I wonder is such a relationship or reader and auhor, one of command and subordination an "empowering" one to use one of the most loved terms of Covey. When I first read it in my public library I was astounded at how much of this book reads as gospel, a sacred definitive text on the human condition. With not a hint of distrust towards the validity of its claims or its0 historicity (i.e. it being just a product of a certain time and place, a society and a culture, an individual and hir or her souroundings.) For god's sake, even the number seven has mythical connotations as it is a "magic" symbolic number one finds in various cultures around the world. The main ideas of the book, the responsibility of the individual - a main existential idea of choice and commitment one can fully understand, grasp and practise in the works of sartre, neitsche, heidegger, ortega y gasset et al in philosophy and frankl, binswater, rollo may et al. (in fact Covey name drops some of this existential thinkers in but in a fragmeted, quotes out of context fashion) in existential psycotherapy, the second habit the one of "begining with the end in mind" and commiting themselves and "personal meaning" is again an existential offshoot and over-simplification of the human task to enhance the self, act rather than be acted upon, and assigning meaning to ones life, the third one "first things first" i.e. applying some sort of perspective in ones life and prioritizing is just plain common sense and i will not go in it, the next one to think win win, to care for your relationships with other people is straight forward moralism with no substance if applied the way he understands it and to care for the others as a means of achieving your goal of success is just too opportunistic and deceitful for my tastes, next listen empathically - well, well that's an original thought bravo mr. covey now how long did it take you to come to this conclusion, well, not enough space left due to the 1000 word limit, anyway you can imagine the rest...

This book as any other this talentless hack has written is an insult to the human mind and complexity, it chews and digests a wealth of knowledge, our human testament, and spits out an incoherent blather to the reader. Please, if you are not the narrow-minded yuppie sell-out success and control freak, but a wel meaning human being in every sense do not read this, or skim through it at the library at least. Try literature, or theatre or a good therapist or a good friend, or buy a book on existential psychology.

Thanks a lot to amazon for the space and to you for your time and effort, hope this review has something to say


5 out of 5 stars Strategies for Effectiveness   May 31, 2002
 139 out of 150 found this review helpful

Knowledge is the quickest and safest path to success in any area of life. Stephen Covey has encapsulated the strategies used by all those who are highly effective. Success can be learned and this book is an excellent way to learn how to do that.I also highly recommend Turner, Turner, Turner: The King of Network Marketing to learn strategies from another highly spirited man who has learned how to achieve maximum effectiveness and keep balance in all aspects of life.


5 out of 5 stars A OUTSTANDING BOOK!   August 2, 1998
 121 out of 124 found this review helpful

Stephen Covey has written one of the best works ever in personal development and a refreshing change from so much verbage out there in other works. I have been an avid student of personal development since the 70's and learned a lot from this excellent work. I also highly recommend "SUPERSELF" by Charles Givens, another extraordinary work by an equally extraordinary man. I have read & reread Seven Habits and SuperSelf several times over the last few years and always get something new out of each every time. Excellent books to help you succeed in any area of endeavor.

Powered by Associate-O-Matic

T-shirts, Posters

Pentagram T-shirts, bags, etc...


Gothic Posters

Related Links
Dark Videos

Terra Naturals - All Natural Products






© Darkpub.com 2001-2007. All rights reserved. Domain Registration and Hosting