The four disciplines of execution review năm 2024

In business, survival depends on meeting objectives. Most failures in organizations today are not the result of a lack of smarts, they are caused by a lack of execution -- things just don't get done. Defining a clear strategy and setting goals is one thing, sticking to strategy and meeting those goals is quite another. The 4 Disciplines of Execution teaches how to focus on your top priorities and get the critical things accomplished. Whether you are a member of a team, lead a team, or lead an entire organization, this workshop will equip you to deliver on your top priorities consistently.

What You'll Learn

Four universal business disciplines that deliver results again and again:

  1. Focus on the Wildly Important
  1. Create a Compelling Scoreboard
  1. Translate Lofty Goals into Specific Actions
  1. Hold Each Other Accountable -- All of the Time

Each discipline includes a business principle, old thinking, new thinking, and a metaphor that further clarifies the learning. A bonus section, "Implementing the Disciplines," supported by a special resource CD, gives critical information about activating the power of the 4 Disciplines in your organization.

GenresBusinessLeadershipManagementProductivityNonfictionPersonal DevelopmentSelf Help

4 pages, Audio CD

First published May 25, 2004

About the author

Stephen Richards Covey was the author of the best-selling book, "The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People". Other books he wrote include "First Things First", "Principle-Centered Leadership", and "The Seven Habits of Highly Effective Families". In 2004, Covey released "The 8th Habit". In 2008, Covey released "The Leader In Me—How Schools and Parents Around the World Are Inspiring Greatness, One Child at a Time". He was also a professor at the Jon M. Huntsman School of Business at Utah State University. You can purchase Stephen R. Covey's books and audios at //www.7habitsstore.com

Covey died at the Eastern Idaho Regional Medical Center in Idaho Falls, Idaho, on July 16, 2012, due to complications from a bicycle accident he suffered the previous April.

Ratings & Reviews

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Community Reviews

Displaying 1 - 30 of 59 reviews

1,188 reviews102 followers

February 3, 2023

When you work for a successful organization you often take that success for granted, but when you work for an organization where success seems like coincidental luck and nothing seems to lead to the desired results, you have to start to question just what is going wrong. This quick listen talks about the simple but necessary concepts that are generally overlooked when trying to achieve a goal or bring about change.

Leaders often spend a great deal of time on strategic planning, but fail to consider just how to implement and execute their plans to improve and achieve the results. This shortcoming is due to the fact that there is no education in execution only in planning. Additionally, strategic planning yields simple ideas that we try to put forth in complex environments. But by focusing on and aligning individuals with priorities, ensuring that people know the goal and how to achieve it, keeping score to stay on track for success, and holding people accountable for results and progress, the results can be influenced for favorable outcomes.

While this is already a quick overview, for those short on time or just looking for key concepts to ponder over for themselves, the theoretical base is offered in the first five minutes. Those well-placed key words were enough to get me thinking and agreeing that the desired end result is attainable when all steps in the process are planned for and executed.

I know several managers/leaders I'd like to recommend this to.

2023 audiobook career-advice

188 reviews10 followers

September 24, 2013

I enjoyed this book a lot and almost gave it five stars. It's a very solid practical guide to achieving change and best performance in a team or company. The key insight is to pick a small number of changes [1-3] and focus exclusively on them with a disciplined process that sits clearly outside the whirlwind of everyday execution.

The four disciplines are: - Focus on the wildly important [focus] - Act on the lead measures [leverage] - Keep a compelling scoreboard [engagement] - Create a cadence of accountability [accountablity]

Together they bring clarity, focus on the right areas, engagement and no space to hide.

January 24, 2020

While this book has insanely good ideas and practical tips on measurement and goal setting across teams. It's written so verbosely and with so many examples it really defeats the point.

I think if I was to recomend this book it would be read the first 2 sections and ignore the 3rd

1. Overview of the 4 Disiplines 2. How to install them [even skim read]

engineering-management

72 reviews28 followers

July 12, 2019

This seminar is relevant to any professional, even if they are a freelancer and part of a team of one. I definitely recommend implementing these disciplines.

399 reviews

August 1, 2015

It might just be me, but it seems like the last three or four books on management I have read are not much more than an extended marketing tool designed to monetize other services the authors offer. The influence of website marketing is all over these books, and the results have generally been incredibly dissatisfying as the book often turns into a one or two hundred page brochure for consulting services. The Four Disciplines of Execution suffers from some of this marketing strategy, particularly the second half of the book where case studies praising 4DX and instructions on how to use their website take up a lot of space. However, the authors have sufficiently grasped the concept of overselling content to make the book a value in itself, and the marketing of their website and consulting services becomes only a minor annoyance instead of an impediment to understanding the management strategy they have constructed.

The premise of the Four Disciplines of Execution is that a lot of management theory is just that, theory. Management books and consultants spend a lot of time on planning and on results but very little time on the nuts and bolts of how to implement a strategy. The book attempts to answer the how of implementation through a simple four step process of 1] establishing quantifiable goals with clear end-dates; 2] identifying measures/indicators that if executed well will achieve the goal; 3] hold people accountable for a weekly act that will contribute to the measure first and the goal second; 4] score the action. They build a nomenclature around this process [WIGS=Goals, Lead Measures=indicators; Cadence of Accountability=weekly acts; Scoreboard=keeping score]. This all feels like common sense; anyone who has played a sport probably understands much of this intuitively; and I have honestly experienced similar strategies in well run companies. However, the practice is certainly not universal to every company or every team. And, more importantly, it functions as a useful manager’s road map for achieving the right outcomes.

Overall, the book succeeds where others fail. It provides more than just an extended sales pitch for the consulting work of the authors. It gives some good case studies for implementation. And it explains the rationale for each of the four disciplines in a thorough and straightforward manner. I enjoyed the reading this, I learned some things, and I am implementing the suggested strategies. I don’t think higher praise can be given to a management book.

192 reviews111 followers

July 6, 2013

Simple easy but lacks some skill of delivering Summaries

April 24, 2020

Blinkist

Learn how to put your plans into practice.

Getting people to change is the real challenge of executing strategic goals.

Focusing on specific, wildly important goals is the first discipline of execution.

The second discipline of execution: meet your goals by choosing measures that reflect current behavior.

Motivate your team by keeping score of their performance: the third discipline of execution.

The fourth discipline of execution is establishing a culture of accountability.

Follow a step-by-step process to implement wildly important goals and identify useful predictive measures.

Follow through on introducing a scoreboard and creating a cycle of accountability.

Follow a six-step process to involve all departments in the Four Disciplines model.

First, clearly define your overall primary WIG.

Next, involve the team leaders: Each department head should define one individual WIG [and appropriate lead measures] that aligns with the overall WIG. As the institution leader, you can veto certain goals that seem incompatible with the organization’s broader goals, but make sure each manager has the freedom to choose her own WIG. Otherwise, you won’t get the level of engagement that you’re looking for.

Third, sit down with the team leaders to teach them about the Four Disciplines model. After all, they’ll need to execute this process within their own departments!

After that, each team leader goes ahead and launches the process with her own team. They should also ask for feedback and get their department’s approval for moving forward on the WIGs and lead measures.

In the fifth step, individual teams work on perfecting the method. Ideally, department heads should get additional coaching on the process for a period of at least three months.

And, finally, wrap it all up by setting up quarterly meetings with all the team leaders to discuss the progress you’re making together as an organization.

The key message:

Executing strategic goals requires changing people’s behavior in the midst of a whirlwind of urgent daily tasks. But to execute their vision across the organization, company leaders should focus on just one or two strategic goals and useful key measures.

Actionable advice:

Choose a goal that will impact your performance.

When you are choosing a wildly important goal, consider two sources: things within the whirlwind and things outside it. A wildly important goal from the whirlwind could be something that needs fixing as soon as possible or something your team already excels at and needs to use as leverage. Outside the whirlwind, you can usually choose among things that offer you the chance to gain strategic advantage, like including new product features.

This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.

1 review

April 2, 2020

I really enjoyed this book and am highly appreciative of the framework it provides. The only reason I didn't give it all 5 stars is that while the book provides countless examples of applying the framework for different types of teams, companies, and large organizations, it essentially ignores the solo entrepreneur, freelancer, or individual who could certainly benefit from the same custom examples that are provided for teams and organizations. Might be worth an update considering how the workforce now encompasses more working individuals.

81 reviews

March 16, 2020

Pretty good book. No arguing with the value of the 4 Disciplines presented. However, I found myself thinking that the four Disciplines presented in this book essentially were "Scrum Lite". If you're familiar with OKRs and Scrum, none of this will be new, but is helpful for orgs not operating in fully dedicated cross functional teams.

There was a decent amount of filler in this book [i.e. A whole section on how to use their website] which makes this a quicker read than the 300 pages suggests.

3-star-books business owned

11 reviews1 follower

June 4, 2022

Excellent book. The biggest takeaway for me was in the area of creating and executing on goals. Setting the right goals. Setting quantifiable goals and a systematic way to accomplish those goals.

There was some redundancy as there tend to be in books of this nature, but if you get through it the payoff is worth it.

308 reviews2 followers

November 4, 2019

Covey and team did a great job with this book. It is rich in detail, research, and explanation. It is clearly the culmination of much blood, sweat, and tears. I love management books that are equal parts theory and practicality, and this is both. A must-read for any team leader and manager.

leadership work-related

46 reviews

November 23, 2017

Excellent book on helping you achieve your most important goals in business and how to align your team to be successful.

March 29, 2018

Mermorizing. Simple but effective - this is what my organisation has been missing. Takes a bit to get going but otherwise amazing.

371 reviews22 followers

August 29, 2018

Truly first rate and practical tool to learn focus and how to get stuff done. Highly recommended.

2018

803 reviews9 followers

October 28, 2018

Among the better business books I've read:

Focus on the Wildly Important. Act on the Lead Measures. Keep a Compelling Scoreboard. Create a Cadence of Accountability.

management-work non-fiction

30 reviews1 follower

November 17, 2018

One of my favorite reads this year. I have to admit I haven’t implemented all of the things in the book in my new role, but it might be time to reread my highlights and put into a system

December 2, 2018

Great book to help you plan and achieve your goals or the goals of your team.

39 reviews18 followers

December 21, 2018

If your team/business is struggling with a goal to execute. This is the perfect book for you.

January 12, 2019

This is a must read business book that had a big impact on how I track goals and their progress with my team.

12 reviews

May 11, 2019

Good book but kind of repetitive. Could use more case studies.

82 reviews21 followers

July 7, 2019

Brilliant audiobook. If you're a company, this lucidly explains the different steps you need to take, to take your company's ideas from plan to finished product.

9 reviews1 follower

July 9, 2019

Useful structure and framework for execution

585 reviews5 followers

April 17, 2021

I always find these books could have been an article. I found the first chapter the most useful. Summary: focus on 1/2 goals, measure progress and adapt accordingly, keep scorecard, accountability.

103 reviews2 followers

August 21, 2021

A transformative book on how we can apply wildly important goals in our work and lives in order to be more productive on what matters.

library-mba

1 review

October 3, 2022

Must read book for management people

This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.

442 reviews122 followers

May 23, 2023

Спиноф книги Кови "7 Навыков высокоэффективных людей". Автор разбирает принципы исполнения целей и задач. Книга хорошо зашла мне в аудио.

5 reviews21 followers

March 13, 2017

This book is most helpful if you have a place to practice the principles. The concepts are simple but not easy. I read about 75% of this book and found it very motivating- I couldn't wait to implement and experiment with my teams. If you are interested in getting work done that matters, this is your book.

What is the 4DX summary?

The “4DX” concept is based on the principles of focus, leverage, engagement and accountability. The first part of the book explains the 4 principles of execution, and the second part presents case studies and tips on how to install the 4DX in multiple teams in a large organization.

What are the 4 disciplines of execution for dummies?

By following the 4 Disciplines—Focus on the Wildly Important; Act on Lead Measures; Keep a Compelling Scoreboard; Create a Cadence of Accountability—leaders can produce breakthrough results, even when executing the strategy requires a significant change in behavior from their teams.

What are the 4 disciplines of execution focus?

This modal can be closed by pressing the Escape key or activating the close button..

Discipline 1: Focus on the Wildly Important. This is the discipline of focus. ... .

Discipline 2: Act on the Lead Measures. ... .

Discipline 3: Keep a Compelling Scoreboard. ... .

Discipline 4: Create a Cadence of Accountability..

What are the insights from the 4 disciplines of execution?

The four disciplines are "Focusing on the Wildly Important," "Acting on Lead Measures," "Keeping a Compelling Scoreboard," and "Creating a Cadence of Accountability." The four disciplines are designed to help you execute a strategy in the midst of the whirlwind of your daily responsibilities and commitments.

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