First Things First
FeaturedTime management book by Stephen R. Covey offering a fresh perspective on prioritization by focusing on importance over urgency. Provides a framework for achieving personal and professional success while maintaining essential values and life balance.
Last updated: 2026-03-18 18:45
Overview
"First Things First" by Stephen R. Covey, A. Roger Merrill, and Rebecca R. Merrill builds on Covey's famous "7 Habits of Highly Effective People," specifically expanding on Habit 3: Put First Things First. The book presents a principle-centered approach to time management that aligns daily activities with deeply held values and life goals.
Core Philosophy
The central premise is that effective time management isn't about managing time at all – it's about managing ourselves and our choices. The book distinguishes between:
- The Clock: Represents commitments, appointments, schedules, goals, activities
- The Compass: Represents vision, values, principles, mission, conscience, direction
True effectiveness comes from balancing the clock with the compass.
The Time Management Matrix
The book popularized the Eisenhower Matrix, dividing tasks into four quadrants:
Quadrant I: Urgent & Important
- Crises, pressing problems, deadline-driven projects
- Cannot be ignored but living here leads to stress and burnout
Quadrant II: Not Urgent & Important (The Key Quadrant)
- Prevention, relationship building, planning, recreation
- Where leadership, vision, and effective personal management happen
- Most neglected but most important for long-term success
Quadrant III: Urgent & Not Important
- Interruptions, some calls and emails, other people's minor issues
- Creates the illusion of importance because it's urgent
Quadrant IV: Not Urgent & Not Important
- Trivia, busywork, time wasters, excessive TV
- Should be minimized or eliminated
Key Principles
Weekly Planning
Rather than daily to-do lists, focus on weekly planning that allows for flexibility while maintaining strategic direction.
Roles and Goals
Identify key roles in life (parent, spouse, professional, community member) and set goals for each, ensuring balanced progress.
Integrity in the Moment of Choice
Alignment between values and actions when making decisions about how to spend time.
The "Yes" and "No"
Saying yes to what matters most requires saying no to other things, even good things.
Practical Tools
- Personal Mission Statement: Define your life's purpose and values
- Role Identification: Clarify the different hats you wear
- Weekly Compass: Plan each week around roles and Quadrant II activities
- Daily Adaptation: Allow flexibility within the weekly framework
- Principle-Centered Decision Making: Use values as criteria for choices
The Difference from Traditional Time Management
Traditional approaches focus on:
- Efficiency and speed
- Doing more in less time
- Better organization of tasks
First Things First focuses on:
- Effectiveness over efficiency
- Doing the right things rather than doing things right
- Living with integrity to values
- Quality of results and relationships
Impact
The book has fundamentally shaped modern thinking about productivity and time management, moving the conversation from mere efficiency to meaningful effectiveness aligned with personal values.
Ideal For
Leaders, executives, anyone feeling successful but unfulfilled, people struggling to balance work and personal life, and those seeking to align daily actions with deeper purpose.
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