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The Power of Habit: Why We Do What We Do in Life and Business Paperback – January 7, 2014
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“Few [books] become essential manuals for business and living. The Power of Habit is an exception.”—Financial Times
A WALL STREET JOURNAL AND FINANCIAL TIMES BEST BOOK OF THE YEAR
In The Power of Habit, award-winning business reporterCharles Duhigg takes us to the thrilling edge of scientific discoveries that explain why habits exist and how they can be changed. Distilling vast amounts of information into engrossing narratives that take us from the boardrooms of Procter & Gamble to the sidelines of the NFL to the front lines of the civil rights movement, Duhigg presents a whole new understanding of human nature and its potential. At its core, The Power of Habit contains an exhilarating argument: The key to exercising regularly, losing weight, being more productive, and achieving success is understanding how habits work. As Duhigg shows, by harnessing this new science, we can transform our businesses, our communities, and our lives.
With a new Afterword by the author
- Print length416 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherRandom House Trade Paperbacks
- Publication dateJanuary 7, 2014
- Dimensions5.17 x 0.83 x 7.97 inches
- ISBN-10081298160X
- ISBN-13978-0812981605
- Lexile measure1150L
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Customers find the book engaging and insightful, providing them with motivation and insight into habits. They describe it as entertaining and easy to understand. The book covers topics like business habits and how successful corporations operate. However, some readers feel the book is too long with excessive stories and side stories.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the book engaging and informative. They appreciate the compelling stories about people who exemplify the concept of habits. The writing style is described as engaging and the examples are interesting.
"..." delivers Duhigg's report in the form of a book full of good stories about people who exemplify the concept of "habit" in action, including direct..." Read more
"...The flush of winning, free travel feel good. You also end up gambling away your life savings...." Read more
"...one’s teeth, the routine was brushing, and the reward was a beautiful Pepsodent smile, just like Shirley Temple and Clark Gable...." Read more
"...This focus lead Alcoa to become very profitable, and successful. This Keystone habit played a critical role...." Read more
Customers find the book helpful in understanding how habits form and how to use them to our advantage. They find it enlightening and persuasive, providing hope and motivation. The book also addresses philosophical questions about the nature of habits. It helps regulate behavior and reinforce autonomy. Readers appreciate the thorough analysis of the habit loop and how it impacts their lives.
"...Habits can be simple or more complex, making short work of such activities as: brushing one's teeth while thinking about the workday ahead; driving..." Read more
"...The author examines the habit loop and gives a thorough analysis of how it impacts our life and how we can use this influence to make positive..." Read more
"...The training processes utilises the best insights into habit formation and focused on the development of self-discipline under the trying conditions..." Read more
"...They smoke less and show more patience with colleagues and family. They use credit cards less frequently and say they feel less stressed...." Read more
Customers enjoy the book's entertaining guide to habits and success. They find it informative and exciting to read, with an engaging reportage on how habits form and influence lives. The format is more entertaining than most nonfiction books, making it approachable and easy to understand. Readers appreciate the author's sense of humor and writing style.
"...They also make for very entertaining reading on what might be a very dry subject...." Read more
"...and sociology, The Power of Habit is one of the most accessible and entertaining. Readability Light -+--- Serious..." Read more
"...He either dismisses or diminishes it as being, well, unscientific, a charge Duhigg uses as a trump card against an AA which he says remains &#..." Read more
"...Since you like the natural touch, this is rewarding, and is healthier than playing solitaire...." Read more
Customers find the book easy to use. They appreciate the clear explanation of the habit loop and how it simplifies life. The core principles are easy to remember and understand. The book explains how habits can simplify work environments.
"..."The Power of Habit" shines a bright light on organizational habits, but not only that...." Read more
"...The author examines the habit loop and gives a thorough analysis of how it impacts our life and how we can use this influence to make positive..." Read more
"...wishes to change their behavior to one which is more healthy and becomes automatic...." Read more
"...shift in the routine stage can upend the pattern and that every habit is malleable and fixable, however complex it may seem...." Read more
Customers find the book helpful for business knowledge. They mention it covers personal and business habits, as well as the habits of successful organizations and societies. The chapters show how large corporations use research to their advantage. Readers appreciate the examples of both people and corporations, including CEOs.
"...divided into three parts: The Habits of Individuals, The Habits of Successful Organizations, and the Habits of Societies...." Read more
"...(patience and willpower) was one of the best predictors for success in later life...." Read more
"...training method is fascinating, as are the many other examples of individuals and corporations...." Read more
"...It ended on the strongest most effective note yet." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the book's adherence to habits. Some find it insightful on willpower and how to develop it, as well as effective strategies for maintaining exercise routines. However, others feel the suggestions on breaking habits are inadequate, and the book is not a guide to changing one's life.
"...There were several references to making healthier eating & exercise choices, though it was not easy...." Read more
"...The Baumeister and Tierney book has numerous insights on willpower and how to develop it, as well as insights and tips related to setting goals and..." Read more
"...The point of the chapter was basically that habits are surprisingly delicate, to use Duhigg's term, and can be easily disrupted, with the right..." Read more
"...Furthermore, willpower can be learned, and strengthened through exercise like a muscle...." Read more
Customers have different views on the pacing of the book. Some find it engaging, with real-life examples and applications of breaking habits introduced and repeated. Others feel it rambles and lacks explanations at the end. The book also contains unnecessary profanity.
"...that this book doesn't even seem to understand that it's making a mockery of itself, and losing all credibility after part one...." Read more
"...is accessible "as is," such aids would make it easier to tie together diverse examples, remember themes and links, and go back to them later...." Read more
"The book came falling apart. The prologue fell out as I was reading it. It was frustrating...." Read more
"...I thought the book was weakest near the end when it tried to apply habit theory to entire societies, and to my chagrin (in the afterword) when it..." Read more
Customers find the book excessively long with too many stories and side stories. They feel it's repetitive and long-winded, with non-sequentially delivered stories. The flow of the book is inconsistent, with stories starting and abruptly stopping. Some readers feel the topics are repeated from articles they've already read in The New Yorker.
"...Lots of fascinating information. However, it's very light on how to stop bad habits or start good habits, other than describing how certain key..." Read more
"...habits; whereas the book was more about theories and spent too many pages on case studies that I felt diverted from its core premise." Read more
"...the famous success stories were mildly interesting, they just went on too darn long...." Read more
"...expanded, but at the same time, it's brilliantly simple and does not need to be longer...." Read more
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Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on April 10, 2012The Economist magazine calls this a "first-rate" business book and I agree. Charles Duhigg tells of people - individuals, businesses, and other organizations - who carry out routines and act on habits in recurrent situations. The book puts a spotlight on people who succeed at shedding some habits and bringing new ones to life - in themselves and in people around them. In these pages lie a powerful concept and illustrative stories.
Habits can be efficient. When a habit is activated, we don't have to think so much about all the steps and breaths we take. Habits can be simple or more complex, making short work of such activities as: brushing one's teeth while thinking about the workday ahead; driving a car while listening to the radio; or tending to customers, fielding their requests, and responding routinely in a warm, appreciative manner. Routines can do a lot of good when it comes to maintaining desirable habits. But things can get challenging when we would like a habit to be changed.
A big part of the value in this book is its parade of human stories about how people have succeeded in replacing old habits with new ones. There are a few stories, too, about people who tried but failed to change a bad habit. Along the way, the author sketches a do-it-yourself model. He talks about people identifying existing "habit loops" which may include external triggers of time, place, people, and situations. Then, the idea is to interrupt and redirect activity toward the desired goals, eventually forming new habits.
In some examples, small "wins" are shown leading to bigger wins as people build skills and confidence in new ways of doing things. And in stories of organizational or cultural habits, positive changes are shown sometimes to set off a ripple effect, where new habits spread to more people in a kind of social contagion.
Charles Duhigg is a New York Times journalist and a graduate of Harvard Business School. He draws together a sampling of psychological research and real-life examples in business and other organizational endeavors. "The Power of Habit" delivers Duhigg's report in the form of a book full of good stories about people who exemplify the concept of "habit" in action, including direct interviews with some of the players in the stories. With this Duhigg presents a psychological concept of habits that a general audience might apply in everyday business and personal life. This book, if it reaches a large readership, may follow in the grooves of what journalist and psychologist Daniel Goleman's books did to popularize "emotional intelligence" and "EQ." (Goleman focuses on business applications of emotional intelligence in his 1998 book, Working with Emotional Intelligence.)
Duhigg's stories are interesting in their own right, easy to understand, and memorable. They run the gamut from sports to neurosurgery, and from marketing toothpaste to overhauling the managerial culture of a heavy industrial corporation.
For example, chapter 2 "The Craving Brain: How to Create New Habits," showcases breakthroughs in consumer marketing (and in one case, the dental health of a whole society) connected to habit changes. The examples cover a variety of marketing obstacles and breakaway solutions including Pepsodent toothpaste, Schlitz beer, and Febreze household deodorizer.
Chapter 5, "Starbucks and the Habit of Success: When Willpower Becomes Automatic," talks about staff training programs that have been credited with enhancing customer service and tuning up whole organizational cultures. Examples besides Starbucks include Deloitte Consulting and the Container Store.
Perhaps the most colorful and intriguing business story in the book is about the managerial successes of Paul O'Neill when he was CEO of the aluminum company Alcoa. (He later went on to serve as U.S. Treasury Secretary.) This is told mostly in Chapter 4, "Keystone Habits, or the Ballad of Paul O'Neill: Which Habits Matter Most." When O'Neill became CEO of Alcoa in 1987, he spearheaded the company on a headlong drive to achieve an error-free standard of employee safety. He rallied employees up and down the hierarchy, and across functions, to the cause of becoming "the safest company in America... [despite that]... employees work with metals that are 1500 degrees and can rip a man's arm off." (p. 98)
At first, Alcoa's investors and employees alike were skeptical, seeing O'Neill's radical quest for superiority in employee safety as too narrow, quixotic, and off-center. O'Neill conceived of the safety charge as a focal point that would trigger all sorts of changes in routines and habits of accountability throughout the company. Preventing employee injuries became a "keystone habit" in Duhigg's lingo, that would set off a ripple effect leading to an upswing in total corporate performance.
It worked. Within a year, Alcoa's profits reached an all-time high. Over a 13-year run with O'Neill at the helm, profits and the stock price both increased by 400%. Time lost to worker injuries declined to one-twentieth the U.S. average. Duhigg's book cites interviews with O'Neill himself and other Alcoa people who were there, and mentions that Alcoa stands as a case study in business schools.
"The Power of Habit" shines a bright light on organizational habits, but not only that. Duhigg serves up stories that point to individual habits, with relevance for personal success, such as interrupting a snacking habit or ending addictions. I see Duhigg's concept of habit loops as compatible with and complementary to the work of food and marketing psychologist Brian Wansink in his excellent book, Mindless Eating: Why We Eat More Than We Think (2006). At the other end of the scale, Duhigg talks about habits changing at a societal level of attitudes and behavior, offering an analysis of the civil rights movement's Montgomery bus boycott as an example.
The one disappointment I find is a lack of chapter summaries and sub-chapter headings. While the book certainly is accessible "as is," such aids would make it easier to tie together diverse examples, remember themes and links, and go back to them later. The Audible.com version in particular is harder going without summaries and sub-headings because one is not looking at pages with the chapter heading in the upper right, nor is the listener just a page flip away from glancing at the book's table of contents. The Audible.com version also could do a better job of mentioning the printed book's many visual diagrams for listeners who are interested enough to cross-refer.
The book begins and ends with fitting references to the 19th-century writings of an American philosopher and psychologist, William James, who elucidated the concept of habit before there was much science behind it. James was a prime mover in establishing two major streams of modern social science and philosophy: 1.) behavioral psychology - that is, putting a scientific focus on observable behavior and developing interventions to help people shape their lives according to their better ideals; and 2.) the philosophy of pragmatism - which for James meant evaluating scientific theories according to their "cash-value." In James's pragmatist view, a good theory is one that does good work in the minds of those who use it.
James saw "habit," like Duhigg does, as a core aspect of human nature. Duhigg draws attention to success stories in habit replacement, from dental hygiene to aluminum manufacture. In keeping with the philosophical pulse of James the pragmatist, I give Duhigg's "The Power of Habit" a five-star rating for its eye-opening reports on useful research, chock full of real-world examples. Plus the book is written in a style that is vivid and inviting.
- Reviewed in the United States on December 20, 2012Habits are things that can raise us up to the pinnacle of heaven or plunge us to the depths of misery. The author examines the habit loop and gives a thorough analysis of how it impacts our life and how we can use this influence to make positive changes. Thorough research was done in the writing of this book. Companies like Starbucks, Febreze, Pepsodent and and Alcoa were looked at as models of success and how the habit loop works. They also make for very entertaining reading on what might be a very dry subject.
The part of the brain responsible for habits is the basal ganglia, not memory. The habit loop itself is a circular model that starts with a cue,then proceeds with a routine and then finishes with a reward. To create positive habits and /or eradicate new habits one must tweak the elements of the habit loop. The most effective habit changes involve modifying the routine part of the habit loop. In a sense you are already modifying a current habit. So to start a new habit you need to get in a new routine. Before the advent of Pepsodent, people really did not brush their teeth. Yeah that meant bad breath and a film over your teeth. Gross and yuck and yeah the nation suffered from poor hygiene. To sell toothpaste though you needed a new habit and yeah this one caught on. The reward part was manipulated here and thee reward was white teeth (which could be obtained by eating an apple) and that sharps sparkling taste in your mouth when you are done. The lather in shampoo serves the same function. Febreze used it as well. It was discovered on accident in a lab. It did such a great job killing odors that once you used it you put it in the closet and forgot about it. Not great for sales so you tweak the reward. After a good cleaning people liked a heavily perfumed spray just to finish things off. The company modified the formula.
But sometimes changing the routine is not enough. In alcoholics anonymous which is a spiritual program they work with two or three things. One is the inventory which helps you identify the cues that make you want to drink. The second part is belief, you have to believe that things can get better . That is where the belief in a higher power comes in. Another example of belief playing a role was the team called the Bucs, a losing football team. The coach came in and taught them to memorize a few key plays by wrote. They drilled these routines to death until they knew them cold. They were successful all the way until the finals and then they started slipping up. They did not win the super bowl and the coach ended up transferring to another team he repeated the same process but with the new team something changed. The change was a a death in the coaches family of his son. It forced the team to pull together and believe. They won the super bowl. Belief and a support group.
Starbucks has one of the best training programs hands down and they treat their employees right. The training not only gives them great work skills some of which can be used for college credit but they also give you life skills. One worker could not even hold down a job. He was the product of a broken family and his inner anger lead to temper flare ups at work among other things. Starbucks had something called a notebook where you write up a problem that arises then you write down your solution to the problem and then you practice it. This guy ended up getting a position in management. Bravo Starbucks. The book also analyzes how Howard Schultz bought the company and built it up to what it is today.
A new CEO steps up at Alcoa. He totally shocks everyone by telling them he is going to focus on safety. A real turn off because people really care about money not worker safety. The CEO sets up a communication system that allows for employees to communicate with their supervisors and even the CEO himself. It also calls for interdepartmental communication. They end up with a near perfect safety record and they also boost productivity and stock values soar. This shows the power of changing key habits to change the over all scene.
An analysis of how markets work is included by showcasing how Target Dept. Stores use computer to track consumer spending habits so they could determine which coupon they should send to you. They were so accurate that it creeped out the customer. Solution make it appear more random, so instead of sending a pregnant woman a bunch of ads for diapers and baby products they would mix it up with ads and coupons for a lawn mower. Make everything regular and familiar. Of course they use this to sell you stuff you will want in the future even before you know you'll want it. Familiarity and regularizes also help hit songs become successful.
The last two chapters focus on societal habits by examining the growth of the Saddle Back Church and the Montgomery bus strike involving Rosa Parks. This first chapter puts the leadership not in the hand of one person but in the hands of the people and it works. The Saddle back Church focuses on small weekday study groups that meet in people's homes with or without the pastor. In the Montgomery Bus strike it showed the power of Personal Connections and also what is called weak links or what I call loose associations. We know it as peer pressure to invoke change.
Finally there is the trick Casinos use.They reward you with all sorts of bonuses to get you to come to their casino. The flush of winning, free travel feel good. You also end up gambling away your life savings. Are you free to stop are you compelled to keep gambling. The story is contrasted to night terrors and sleep walking. Habit happen unconsiously when we sleep. fortunately for most our brain paralyzes us so we cannot move but for other they at function does not works. The subconscious is free to cause you to sleep walk, act out in violent fear. Force of habit.
Top reviews from other countries
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Fábio SchornReviewed in Brazil on October 13, 20245.0 out of 5 stars Ótimo livro!
Ótimo livro!
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LucianoReviewed in Italy on February 19, 20245.0 out of 5 stars un libro che mi e' davvero piaciuto
Non il solito libro con frasi fatte e massime da guru del settore. Un vero e prorpio capolavoro di letteratura, e racconto. Questo perche e' scritto molto bene, non a caso e' un best seller.
Lo consiglio, non fa miracoli ma e' una bella lettura :)
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TReviewed in Germany on February 6, 20225.0 out of 5 stars Wenn man die Taktiken in diesem Buch anwendet überlebt man eine Überraschung!
Das perfekte buch für Leute die die Mechanismen des menschlichen Verhaltens verstehen möchten.
Das Buch vermittelt die Zusammenhänge von Gewohnheiten mit unserem alltäglichen Leben und zeigt auf wie man sie zum positiven nutzen kann.
Es ist auf ein Auditorium mit Grundverständnissen über Psychologie ausgelegt, jedoch ist es auch für Laien gut verständlich geschrieben.
Es wird viel mit Beispielen gearbeitet und es ist oft die Rede von Themen die jeder kennt.
Alles in allem ein sehr gutes buch zur Weiterbildung und Krisenbewältigung, es hat mir geholfen aus einer Krise herauszukommen und wieder aufzublühen.
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ChaleReviewed in Spain on December 8, 20205.0 out of 5 stars Un libro fundamental si quieres....
Un libro fundamental si quieres entender y cambiar tus (malos) hábitos y comprender el "porqué" de las cosas, el sistema de recompensas, como funcionan nuestros mecanismos bioquímicos, psicológicos y comportamentales. Todo con base científica sin ser una lectura aburrida. P.D. leer este libro, me ayudó de alguna manera a dejar de fumar sustituyendo unos cuantos malos hábitos acumulados en el tiempo con buenas costumbres. 100% recomendable
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Carlo GarciaReviewed in Mexico on February 25, 20185.0 out of 5 stars Just what the psychiatrist ordered.
Here's the thing. I have been struggling with depression and anxiety for the bettter part of the last 6 years. As you may well know by this, my life now, despite myself being a bit better, is a total chaos. My house is chaos (and I live alone), my routines are chaos (and include 10+ hours of surfing the web), my relationships are chaos (and so many people have chosen to stay away) and it all created a weird unending cycle because a living environment that is a complete chaos can actually make you depressed and anxious, but being anxious and depressed will put your living environment in a complete chaos.
Not anymore.
Or rather, it's starting to actually change. One small change at a time. Using this well explained and well researched little book I was able to put some order into all of the chaos. It's not a huge change right now, at least not from the outside, but being able to breath more calmly because at the very least I can keep some order and do some light cleaning around my life it's a huge deal for someone that has the problems I do. Everyday now I wake up at the same time, I do some light cleaning, cook something healthier and do five minutes of breathing afterwards. Enough to keep me more focused and less prone to sudden mood changes if things don't go great during the rest of the day. And I know this is just the start.
This is the book to change your life. If you are desperate enough to change it and honest enough to recognize you need some extra help (besides medicine and therapy, which also help a lot! by the way, but sometimes we need a little extra).
And I just can't recommend it enough to anyone that is looking to do something else, to get themselves out of a tough emotional situation or that just want a better overall life for themselves and those around them.








