The one thing The surprisingly simple truth behind extraordinary results

Gary Keller, 1957-

Book - 2012

A guide to help you obtain less of what don't want, and more of what you do, and "cut through the clutter, achieve better results in less time, build momentum toward your goal, dial down the stress, overcome that overwhelmed feeling, stay on track, [and] master what matters to you"-- Dust jacket flap.

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Subjects
Published
Austin, Tex. : Bard Press 2012.
Language
English
Main Author
Gary Keller, 1957- (-)
Other Authors
Jay Papasan (-)
Edition
1st ed
Item Description
Title from jacket.
Physical Description
240 p. : ill. (some col.) ; 22 cm
ISBN
9781885167774
  • 1. The ONE Thing
  • 2. The Domino Effect
  • 3. Success Leaves Clues
  • Part 1. The Lies they Mislead and Derail Us
  • 4. Everything Matters Equally
  • 5. Multitasking
  • 6. A Disciplined Life
  • 7. Willpower Is Always on Will-Call
  • 8. A Balanced Life
  • 9. Big Is Bad
  • Part 2. The Truth: The Simple Path to Productivity
  • 10. The Focusing Question
  • 11. The Success Habit
  • 12. The Path to Great Answers
  • Part 3. Extraordinary Results Unlocking the Possibilities within You
  • 13. Live with Purpose
  • 14. Live by Priority
  • 15. Live for Productivity
  • 16. The Three Commitments
  • 17. The Four Thieves
  • 18. The Journey
  • Putting The ONE Thing to Work
  • On the Research
  • Index
  • Acknowledgments
  • About the Authors
  • Resources
  • Copyright
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Part motivational book, part self-help, the latest from Keller (The Millionaire Real Estate Agent), together with Papasan (president of Rellek Publishing), vies to give us a path for achieving extraordinary results. Keller challenges the worthiness of deeply rooted notions-a balanced life, discipline, willpower, multitasking-and presents his insights with a coach's verve and goal-oriented approach. He begins by examining the attitudes and ideas that derail us. From here he moves on to show us how to become more productive; and this, he claims, relies on focus, which leads him to ask: "What's the one thing I can do such that by doing it everything else will be easier or unnecessary?" While the book does grab you by the collar, many of Keller's points are more rhetoric than argument. For example, he challenges the philosophical idea of balance and concludes that it does not exist: "[It] is a grand idea, but not a very practical one. Idealistic, but not realistic." Unfortunately, though, while the actual philosophical idea is about ethics, Keller is referring to work-life balance. Despite the book's appealing style and energy, more intellectual substance would have helped the overall work. 34 illus. (Apr.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.