Eat That Frog
Eat That Frog
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Preface
PAGE 1
EAT THAT FROG!
PAGE 2
EAT THAT FROG!
PREFACE
Thank you for picking up this book. I hope these ideas help you as
much as have helped me and thousands of others. In fact, I hope that
this book changes your life forever.
There is never enough time to do everything you have to do. You are
literally swamped with work and personal responsibilities, projects,
stacks of magazines to read and piles of books you intend to get to
one of these days as soon as you get caught up.
But the fact is that you are never going to get caught up. You will
never get on top of your tasks. You will never get far enough ahead
to be able to get to all those books, magazines and leisure time
activities that you dream of doing.
You can only get control of your time and your life by changing the
way you think, work and deal with the never ending river of
responsibilities that flows over you each day. You can only get
control of your tasks and activities to the degree that you stop doing
some things and start spending more time on the few things that can
really make a difference in your life.
PAGE 3
EAT THAT FROG!
I have studied time management for more than thirty years. I have
immersed myself in the works of Peter Drucker, Alex Mackenzie,
Alan Lakein, Stephen Covey and many, many others. I have read
hundreds of books and thousands of articles on personal efficiency
and effectiveness. This book is the result.
Each time I came across a good idea, I tried it out in my own work
and personal life. If it worked, I incorporated it into my talks and
seminars and taught it to others.
PAGE 4
EAT THAT FROG!
MY OWN STORY
Let me tell you something about myself and the origins of this little
book. I started off in life with few advantages, aside from a curious
mind. I did poorly in school and left without graduating. I worked at
laboring jobs for several years. My future did not appear promising.
As a young man, I got a job on a tramp freighter and went off to see
the world. For eight years, I traveled and worked, and then traveled
some more, eventually visiting more than eighty countries on five
continents.
When I could no longer find a laboring job, I got into sales, knocking
on doors, working on straight commission. I struggled from sale to
sale until I began looking around me and asking, “Why is it that
other people are doing better than I am?”
PAGE 5
EAT THAT FROG!
Success Is Predictable
Simply put, some people are doing better than others because they do
things differently and they do the right things right. Especially,
successful, happy, prosperous people use their time far, far better
than the average person.
This was a revelation to me. I was both amazed and excited with this
discovery. I still am. I realized that I could change my life and
achieve almost any goal I could set if I just found out what others
were doing in that area and then did it myself until I got the same
results they were getting.
Within one year of starting in sales, I was a top salesman. A year later
I was made a manager. Within three years, I became a vice-president
PAGE 6
EAT THAT FROG!
A Simple Truth
This book is written to show you how to get ahead more rapidly in
your career and to simultaneously enrich your personal life. These
pages contain the twenty-one most powerful principles on personal
effectiveness I have ever discovered.
PAGE 7
EAT THAT FROG!
There will be no limit to what you can accomplish when you learn
how to “Eat That Frog!”
Brian Tracy
PAGE 8
EAT THAT FROG!
INTRODUCTION
If you are like most people today, you are overwhelmed with too
much to do and too little time. As you struggle to get caught up, new
tasks and responsibilities just keep rolling in, like the waves of the
ocean. Because of this, you will never be able to do everything you
have to do. You will never be caught up. You will always be behind
in some of your tasks and responsibilities, and probably in many of
them.
For this reason, and perhaps more than ever before, your ability to
select your most important task at each moment, and then to get
started on that task and to get it done both quickly and well, will
probably have more of an impact on your success than any other
quality or skill you can develop.
PAGE 9
EAT THAT FROG!
around a genius who talks a lot and makes wonderful plans but who
gets very little done.
Mark Twain once said that if the first thing you do each morning is to
eat a live frog, you can go through the day with the satisfaction of
knowing that that is probably the worst thing that is going to happen
to you all day long.
Your "frog" is your biggest, most important task, the one you are
most likely to procrastinate on if you don't do something about it.
It is also the one task that can have the greatest positive impact on
your life and results at the moment.
The first rule of frog-eating is: "If you have to eat two frogs, eat the
ugliest one first."
This is another way of saying that, if you have two important tasks
before you, start with the biggest, hardest and most important task
first. Discipline yourself to begin immediately and then to persist
until the task is complete before you go on to something else.
PAGE 10
EAT THAT FROG!
The second rule of frog-eating is: "If you have to eat a live frog at all,
it doesn't pay to sit and look at it for very long."
In study after study of men and women who get paid more and
promoted faster, the quality of "action orientation," stands out as the
most observable and consistent behavior they demonstrate in
everything they do. Successful, effective people are those who launch
directly into their major tasks and then discipline themselves to work
steadily and single mindedly until those tasks are complete.
In our world, and especially in our business world, you are paid and
promoted for getting specific, measurable results. You are paid for
making a valuable contribution and especially, for making the most
important contribution that is expected of you.
PAGE 11
EAT THAT FROG!
PAGE 12
EAT THAT FROG!
No Short Cuts
You remember the story of the man who stops a musician on a street
in New York and asks how he can get to Carnegie Hall. The musician
replies, "Practice, man, practice."
PAGE 13
EAT THAT FROG!
You need three key qualities to develop the habits of focus and
concentration. They are all learnable. They are decision, discipline,
and determination.
There is a special way that you can accelerate your progress toward
becoming the highly productive, effective, efficient person that you
want to be. It consists of your thinking continually about the rewards
and benefits of being an action oriented, fast moving, and focused
person. See yourself as the kind of person who gets important jobs
done quickly and well on a consistent basis.
PAGE 14
EAT THAT FROG!
PAGE 15
EAT THAT FROG!
CHAPTER 1
Set the Table
Before you can determine your “frog” and get on with the job of
eating it, you have to decide exactly what it is you want to achieve in
each area of your life. Clarity is perhaps the most important concept
in personal productivity. The number one reason why some people
get more work done faster is because they are absolutely clear about
their goals and objectives and they don’t deviate from them.
The greater clarity you have regarding what you want and the steps you
will have to take to achieve it, the easier it will be for you to overcome
procrastination, eat your frog and complete the task before you.
PAGE 16
EAT THAT FROG!
There is a powerful formula for setting and achieving goals that you
can use for the rest of your life. It consists of seven simple steps. Any
one of these steps can double and triple your productivity if you are
not currently using it. Many of my graduates have increased their
incomes dramatically in a matter of a few years, or even a few
months, with this simple, seven-part method.
Either decide for yourself or sit down with your boss and discuss
your goals and objectives until you are absolutely, crystal clear about
what is expected of you and in what order of priority. It is amazing
how many people are working away, day after day, on low value
tasks because they have not had this critical discussion with their
manager.
Stephen Covey says that, "Before you begin scrambling up the ladder
of success, make sure that it is leaning against the right building."
PAGE 17
EAT THAT FROG!
Think on paper. When you write your goal down, you crystallize it
and give it tangible form. You create something that you can touch
and see. On the other hand, a goal or objective that is not in writing is
merely a wish or a fantasy. It has no energy behind it. Unwritten
goals lead to confusion, vagueness, misdirection and numerous
mistakes.
Step Four: Make a list of everything that you can think of that you
are going to have to do to achieve your goal.
As you think of new activities, add them to your list. Keep building
your list until it is complete. A list gives you a visual picture of the
larger task or objective. It gives you a track to run on. It dramatically
increases the likelihood that you will achieve your goal as you have
defined it and on schedule.
PAGE 18
EAT THAT FROG!
With a written goal and an organized plan of action, you will be far
more productive and efficient than someone who is carrying his goals
around in his mind.
Build this activity into your daily schedule. You may read a specific
number of pages on a key subject. You could call on a specific
number of prospects or customers. You can engage in a specific
period of physical exercise. You can learn a certain number of new
words in a foreign language. Whatever it is, you must never miss a
day.
PAGE 19
EAT THAT FROG!
Keep pushing forward. Once you start moving, keep moving. Don’t stop.
This decision, this discipline alone, can dramatically increase your speed
of goal accomplishment and boost your personal productivity.
Goals are the fuel in the furnace of achievement. The bigger your
goals and the clearer they are, the more excited you become about
achieving them. The more you think about your goals, the greater
becomes your inner drive and desire to accomplish them.
Think about your goals and review them daily. Every morning when
you begin, take action on the most important task you can
accomplish to achieve your most important goal at the moment.
PAGE 20
EAT THAT FROG!
For example, you would write. “I earn X number of dollars per year.”
Or “I weigh X number of pounds.” Or “I drive such and such a car.”
2. Review your list of ten goals and select the one goal that, if you
achieved it, would have the greatest positive impact on your life.
Whatever that goal is, write it on a separate sheet of paper, set a
deadline, make a plan, take action on your plan and then do
something every single day that moves you toward that goal. This
exercise alone could change your life!
PAGE 21
EAT THAT FROG!
CHAPTER 2
Plan Every Day In Advance
You have heard the old question, ”How do you eat an elephant?
Answer: One bite at a time!”
How do you eat your biggest, ugliest frog? The same way; you break
it down into specific step-by-step activities and then you start on the
first one.
Your mind, your ability to think, plan and decide, is your most
powerful tool for overcoming procrastination and increasing your
productivity. Your ability to set your goals, make plans and take
action on them determines the course of your life. The very act of
thinking and planning unlocks your mental powers, triggers your
creativity and increases your mental and physical energies.
PAGE 22
EAT THAT FROG!
One of your top goals at work should be for you to get the highest
possible return on your investment of mental, emotional and physical
energy. The good news is that every minute spent in planning saves
as many as ten minutes in execution. It only takes about ten to twelve
minutes for you to plan out your day, but this small investment of
time will save you at least two hours (100-120 minutes) in wasted
time and diffused effort throughout the day.
You may have heard of the Six "P" Formula. It says, "Proper Prior
Planning Prevents Poor Performance."
Always work from a list. When something new comes up, add it to
the list before you do it. You can increase your productivity and
output by 25% or more, by about two hours, from the first day that
you begin working consistently from a list.
PAGE 23
EAT THAT FROG!
Make out your list the night before, at the end of the workday. Move
everything that you have not yet accomplished onto your list for the
coming day and then add everything that you have to do the next
day. When you make out your list the evening or the night before,
your subconscious mind works on your list all night long while you
sleep. Often you will wake up with great ideas and insights that you
can use to get your job done faster and better than you had initially
thought.
The more time you take to make written lists of everything you have
to do, in advance, the more effective and efficient you will be.
There are different lists that you need for different purposes. First,
you should create a master list on which you write down everything
you can think of that you want to do some time in the future. This is
the place where you capture every idea that comes to or every new
task or responsibility that comes up. You can then sort out the items
later.
Second, you should have a monthly list that you make up at the end
of the month for the month ahead. This may contain items
transferred from your master list.
Third, you should have a weekly list where you plan your entire
week in advance. This is a list that is under construction as you go
through the current week.
PAGE 24
EAT THAT FROG!
Finally, you transfer items from your monthly and weekly lists onto
your daily list. These are the specific activities that you are going to
accomplish that day.
As you work through the day, tick off the items on your list as you
complete them. This activity gives you a visual picture of
accomplishment. It generates a feeling of success and forward
motion. Seeing yourself working progressively through your list
motivates and energizes you. It raises your self-esteem and self-
respect. Steady, visible progress propels you forward and helps you
to overcome procrastination.
Planning a Project
When you have a project of any kind, begin by making a list of every
step that you will have to complete to finish the project from
beginning to end. Organize the project by priority and sequence. Lay
out the project in front of you on paper, or on a computer so that you
can see every step and task. Then go to work on one task at a time.
You will be amazed at how much you get done in this way.
PAGE 25
EAT THAT FROG!
As you work through your lists, you will feel more and more
effective and powerful. You will feel more in control of your life. You
will be naturally motivated to do even more. You will think better
and more creatively and you will get more and better insights that
enable you to do your work even faster.
As you work steadily through your lists, you will develop a sense of
positive forward momentum that enables you to overcome
procrastination. This feeling of progress gives you more energy and
keeps you going throughout the day.
When you plan each day in advance, you find it much easier to get
going and to keep going. The work goes faster and smoother than ever
before. You feel more powerful and competent. You get more done
faster than you thought possible. Eventually, you become unstoppable.
PAGE 26
EAT THAT FROG!
PAGE 27
EAT THAT FROG!
CHAPTER 3
Apply the 80/20 Rule to Everything
The 80/20 Rule is one of the most helpful of all concepts of time and
life management. It is also called the Pareto Principle after its
founder, the Italian economist Vilfredo Pareto, who first wrote about
it in 1895. Pareto noticed that people in his society seemed to divide
naturally into what he called the "vital few,” the top 20% in terms of
money and influence, and the “trivial many,” the bottom 80%.
For example, this rule says that 20% of your activities will account for
80% of your results. 20% of your customers will account for 80% of
your sales. 20% of your products or services will account for 80% of
your profits. 20% of your tasks will account for 80% of the value of
what you do, and so on.
This means that if you have a list of ten items to do, two of those
items will turn out to be worth as much or more than the other eight
items put together.
PAGE 28
EAT THAT FROG!
Often, one item on a list of ten things that you have to do can be
worth more than all the other nine items put together. This task is
invariably the frog that you should eat first.
Can you guess on which items the average person is most likely to
procrastinate? The sad fact is that most people procrastinate on the
top ten or twenty percent of items that are the most valuable and
important, the “vital few.” They busy themselves instead with the
least important 80%, the "trivial many" that contribute very little to
results.
You often see people who appear to be busy all day long but they
seem to accomplish very little. This is almost always because they are
busy doing things that are of low value while they procrastinate on the
one or two activities that, if they completed them quickly and well,
could make a real difference to their companies and to their careers.
The most valuable tasks you can do each day are often the hardest
and most complex. But the payoff and rewards for completing these
tasks efficiently can be tremendous. For this reason, you must
PAGE 29
EAT THAT FROG!
adamantly refuse to work on tasks in the bottom 80% while you still
have tasks in the top 20% left to be done.
Before you begin work, always ask yourself, “Is this task in the top
20% of my activities or in the bottom 80%?”
Motivate Yourself
PAGE 30
EAT THAT FROG!
2. Resolve today that you are going to spend more and more of your
time working in those few areas that can really make a difference in
you life and career, and less and less time on lower value activities.
PAGE 31
EAT THAT FROG!
CHAPTER 4
Consider the Consequences
“Every man has become great; every successful man has succeeded,
in proportion as he has confined his powers to one particular channel.”
Orison Swett Marden
PAGE 32
EAT THAT FROG!
The clearer you are about your future intentions, the greater
influence that clarity will have on what you do in the moment. With a
clear long-term vision, you are much more capable of evaluating an
activity in the present and to assure that it is consistent with where
you truly want to end up.
PAGE 33
EAT THAT FROG!
Successful people are those who are willing to delay gratification and
make sacrifices in the short term so that they can enjoy far greater
rewards in the long term. Unsuccessful people, on the other hand,
think more about short-term pleasure and immediate gratification
while giving little thought to the long-term future.
On the other hand, coming in to work at the last moment, reading the
newspaper, drinking coffee and socializing with your coworkers may
seem fun and enjoyable in the short-term but it inevitably leads to
lack of promotion, underachievement and frustration in the long-
term.
PAGE 34
EAT THAT FROG!
This law says that, "There is never enough time to do everything, but
there is always enough time to do the most important thing."
Put another way, you cannot eat every tadpole and frog in the pond,
but you can eat the biggest and ugliest one, and that will be enough,
at least for the time being.
PAGE 35
EAT THAT FROG!
When you run out of time and the consequences for non-completion
of a key task or project can be really serious, you always seem to find
the time to get it done, often at the very last minute. When you have
no choice, when the consequences for non-completion are serious
enough, you start early, you stay late and you drive yourself to
complete the job rather than to face the unpleasantness that would
follow if you didn't get it completed within the time limit.
What this means is that you will never be caught up. Get that
wonderful idea out of your mind. All you can hope for is to be on top
of your most important responsibilities. The others will just have to
wait.
PAGE 36
EAT THAT FROG!
Many people say that they work better under the pressure of
deadlines. Unfortunately, years of research indicate that this is
seldom true.
There are three questions that you can use on a regular basis to keep
yourself focused on getting your most important tasks completed on
schedule. The first question is "What are my highest value activities?"
PAGE 37
EAT THAT FROG!
Put another way, what are the biggest frogs that you have to eat to
make the greatest contribution to your organization? To your family?
To your life in general?
This is one of the most important questions you can ask and answer.
What are your highest value activities? First, think this through for
yourself. Then, ask your boss. Ask your coworkers and subordinates.
Ask your friends and family. Like focusing the lens of a camera, you
must be crystal clear about your highest value activities before you
begin work.
The second question you can ask continually is, "What can I and only I
do, that if done well, will make a real difference?"
This is defined something that only you can do. If you don't do it, it
won't be done by someone else. But if you do do it, and you do it
well, it can really make a difference to your life and your career.
What is this particular frog for you?
Every hour of every day, you can ask yourself this question and there
will be a specific answer. You job is to be clear about the answer and
then to start and work on this task before anything else.
PAGE 38
EAT THAT FROG!
The third question you can ask is "What is the most valuable use of my
time, right now?"
Do first things first and second things not at all. As Goethe said, "The things
that matter most must never be at the mercy of the things that matter least."
The more accurate your answers to these questions, the easier it will
be for you to set clear priorities, to overcome procrastination and to
get started on that one activity that represents the most valuable use
of your time.
PAGE 39
EAT THAT FROG!
Whatever it is that can help you the most, set it as a goal, make a plan
to achieve it and go to work on your plan immediately. Remember
the wonderful words of Goethe, “Just begin and the mind grows heated;
continue, and the task will be completed!”
PAGE 40
EAT THAT FROG!
CHAPTER 5
Practice Creative Procrastination
The fact is that you can't do everything that you have to do. You have
to procrastinate on something! Therefore, procrastinate on small tasks.
Put off eating smaller or less ugly frogs. Eat the biggest and ugliest
frogs before anything else. Do the worst first!
PAGE 41
EAT THAT FROG!
Rule: “You can only get your time and your life under control to the
degree to which you discontinue lower value activities.”
Say "no" to anything that is not a high value use of your time and
your life. Say “no” graciously but firmly to avoid agreeing to
something against your will. Say it early and say it often. Remember
that you have no spare time. As we say, "Your dance card is full."
PAGE 42
EAT THAT FROG!
Procrastinate on Purpose
PAGE 43
EAT THAT FROG!
Continually review your life and work to find those time consuming
tasks and activities that you can abandon with no real loss. Cut down
on television watching and spend the time saved with your family, or
reading or exercising, or doing something that enhances the quality
of your life.
Look at your work activities and identify the tasks that you could
delegate or eliminate to free up more time for the work that really
counts. Begin today to practice creative procrastination, to set
posteriorities wherever and whenever you can. This decision alone
can enable to get your time and your life under control.
PAGE 44
EAT THAT FROG!
CHAPTER 6
Use the ABCDE Method Continually
The more thought you invest in planning and setting priorities before
you begin, the more important things you will do and the faster you
will get them done once you get started.
The more important and valuable the task is to you, the more likely
you will be motivated to overcome procrastination and launch
yourself into the job.
Think on Paper
The power of this technique lies in its simplicity. Here’s how it works:
You start with a list of everything you have to do for the coming day.
Think on paper.
PAGE 45
EAT THAT FROG!
If you have more than one "A" task, you prioritize these tasks by
writing A-1, A-2, A-3, and so on in front of each item. Your A-1
task is your biggest, ugliest frog of all.
A "B" item is defined as a task that you should do. But it only has mild
consequences. These are the tadpoles of your work life. This means
that someone may be unhappy or inconvenienced if you don't do it,
but it is nowhere as important as an "A" task. Returning an
unimportant telephone message or reviewing your email would be a
"B" task.
The rule is that you should never do a "B" task when there is an "A"
task left undone. You should never be distracted by a tadpole when
there is a big frog sitting there waiting to be eaten.
A "C" task is defined as something that would be nice to do, but for
which there are no consequences at all, whether you do it or not. "C"
PAGE 46
EAT THAT FROG!
This may be a task that was important at one time but which is no
longer relevant to yourself or anyone else. Often it is something you
continue to do out of habit or because you enjoy it. But every minute
that you spend on an “E” task is time taken away from a task or
activity that can make a real difference in your life.
After you have applied the ABCDE Method to your list, you will now
be completely organized and ready to get more important things
done faster.
The key to making this ABCDE Method work is for you to now
discipline yourself to start immediately on your "A-1" task and then
stay at it until it is complete. Use your willpower to get going and
stay going on this one job, the most important single task you could
PAGE 47
EAT THAT FROG!
possibly be doing. Eat the whole frog and don’t stop until it’s
finished completely.
Your ability to think through, analyze your work list and determine
your "A-1" task is the springboard to higher levels of
accomplishment, and greater self-esteem, self-respect and personal
pride.
PAGE 48
EAT THAT FROG!
CHAPTER 7
Focus On Key Result Areas
Why are you on the payroll? This is one of the most important
questions you ever ask and answer, over and over again, throughout
your career.
As it happens, most people are not sure exactly why they are on the
payroll. But if you are not crystal clear about why it is that you are on
the payroll and what results you have been hired to accomplish, it is
very hard for you to perform at your best, get paid more and
promoted faster.
In its simplest terms, you have been hired to get specific results. A
wage or a salary is a payment for a specific quality and quantity of
work that can be combined with the work of others to create a
product or service that customers are willing to pay for.
Each job can be broken down into about five to seven key result
areas, seldom more. These are the results that you absolutely,
positively have to get to fulfill your responsibilities and make your
maximum contribution to your organization.
PAGE 49
EAT THAT FROG!
Key result areas are similar to the vital functions of the body, such as
blood pressure, heart rate, respiratory rate and brainwave activity.
An absence of any one of these vital functions leads to the death of
the organism. By the same token, your failure to perform in a critical
result area of your work can lead to the end of your job as well.
Whatever you do, there are essential skills that you must have for
you to do your job in an excellent fashion. These demands are
constantly changing. There are core competencies that you have
developed that make it possible for you to do your job in the first
place. But there are always key results that are central to your work
and which determine your success or failure in your job. What are
yours?
PAGE 50
EAT THAT FROG!
Clarity Is Essential
PAGE 51
EAT THAT FROG!
Once you have determined your key result areas, the second step is
for you to grade yourself on a scale of 1-10 in each of those areas.
Where are you strong and where are you weak? Where are you
getting excellent results and where are you underperforming?
Rule: Your weakest key result area sets the height at which you can
use all your other skills and abilities.
This rule says that you could be exceptional in six out of seven key
result areas but really poor in the seventh. And your poor
performance in the seventh area will hold you back and determine
how much you achieve with all your other skills. This weakness will
act as a drag on your effectiveness and be a constant source of friction
and frustration.
For example, delegating is a key result area for a manager. This skill is
the key leverage point that enables a manager to manage, to get results
through others. A manager who cannot delegate properly is held back
from using all his or her other skills at their maximum level of
effectiveness. Poor delegation skills alone can lead to failure in the job.
PAGE 52
EAT THAT FROG!
The reverse of this is that, the better you become in a particular skill
area, the more motivated you will be to perform that function, the
less you will procrastinate and the more determined you will be to
get it finished.
The fact is that everybody has both strengths and weaknesses. Refuse
to rationalize, justify or defend your areas of weakness. Instead,
identify them clearly. Set a goal and make a plan to become very
good in each of those areas. Just think! You may be only one critical
skill away from top performance at your job.
Here is one of the greatest questions you will ever ask and answer:
"What one skill, if I developed and did it in an excellent fashion,
would have the greatest positive impact on my career?"
You should use this question to guide your career for the rest of your
life. Look into yourself for the answer. You usually know what it is.
Ask your boss this question. Ask your coworkers. Ask your friends
and your family. Whatever it is, find out and then go to work to bring
up your performance in this area.
PAGE 53
EAT THAT FROG!
The good news is that all business skills are learnable. If anyone else is
excellent in that particular key result area, this is proof that you can
become excellent as well, if you decide to.
One of the fastest and best ways to stop procrastinating and get more
things done faster is for you to become absolutely excellent in your
key result areas. This can be as important as anything else you do in
your life or your career.
2. Take this list to your boss and discuss it with him or her. Invite
honest feedback and appraisal. You can only get better when you are
open to the constructive inputs of other people. Discuss your results
with your staff and coworkers. Talk them over with your spouse.
Make a habit of doing this analysis regularly for the rest of your
career. Never stop improving. This decision alone can change your
life.
PAGE 54
EAT THAT FROG!
CHAPTER 8
The Law of Three
““Do what you can with what you have right where you are.”
Theodore Roosevelt
There are three core tasks that you perform that contain most of the
value that you contribute to your business or organization. Your
ability to accurately identify these three key tasks and then to focus
on them most of the time is essential for you to achieve at your best.
Let me tell you a true story.
Three months after her first full day coaching session with me in San
Diego, Cynthia stood up and told the group a story. She said, “When
I came here 90 days ago, you claimed that you would show me how
to double my income and double my time off within 12 months. This
sounded completely unrealistic, but I was willing to give it a try.”
She went on. “On the first day, you asked me to write down a list of
everything that I did over the course of a week or a month. I came up
with 17 tasks that I was responsible for. My problem was that I was
completely overwhelmed with work. I was working 10 to 12 hours
per day, six days per week, and not spending enough time with my
husband and my two young children. But I didn’t see any way out.”
PAGE 55
EAT THAT FROG!
She continued with her story. “Once I had made up this list, you then
told me to ask this question, ‘If you could only do one thing on this
list, all day long, which one task would contribute the greatest value
to your company?’ Once I had identified that task, which was quite
easy, I put a circle around that number.
“You then asked, ‘If you could only do one more thing on your list of
key tasks, which would be the second activity that contributes the
most value to your company?’ “
“Once I had identified the second most important task, you asked me
the same question with regard to the third most important task.
“You then said something that shocked me at the time. You said that
fully 90% of the value that you contribute to your company is
contained in those three tasks, whatever they are. Everything else
you do is either a support task or a complimentary task that could
probably be delegated, downsized, outsourced or eliminated.”
Cynthia continued with her story. “As I looked at the three tasks, I
realized that these were the three things that I did that contributed
PAGE 56
EAT THAT FROG!
She said, “My boss was completely silent. He looked at my list of key
tasks, looked back up at me, looked at the list again and then said
‘Okay.’ It was now 10:21 AM according to the clock on the wall
behind him.”
“He said, ‘You’re right, these are the three most important things that
you do in this company, and the three things that you do the best. I
will help you to delegate and downsize all these other minor tasks to
free you up to work full time on these three key tasks. And if you
double your contribution, I will pay you twice as much.”
Cynthia concluded her story by saying, “He did, then I did, then he
did. He helped me delegate and assign my minor tasks so I could
concentrate on my top three jobs. As a result, I doubled my output
over the next 30 days, and he doubled my income.”
PAGE 57
EAT THAT FROG!
She said, “I had been working very hard for more than eight years
and I doubled my income in less than one month by focusing all my
time and energy on my three key tasks. Not only that, instead of
working 10 and 12 hour days, I work from 8:00 to 5:00 and spend
time in the evenings and on the weekends with my husband and my
children. Focusing on my key tasks has transformed my life.”
What we have found is that when you only have 30 seconds to write
your three most important goals, your answers will be as accurate as
if you had 30 minutes or three hours. Your subconscious mind seems
to go into a form of “hyper-drive” and your three most important
goals will pop out of your head and onto the paper, often to the
surprise of the person doing the exercise.
PAGE 58
EAT THAT FROG!
In 80% or more of cases, the three common goals that most people
have are first, a financial and career goal; second, a family or personal
relationship goal; and third, a health or a fitness goal.
And this is as it should be. These are the three most important areas
of life. If you give yourself a grade on a scale of one to ten, with one
being the lowest and ten being the highest, and apply this scale to
each of these three areas, you can immediately identify where you
are doing well in life and where you need some improvement. Try it
yourself and see. Give this test to your spouse or your children. The
answers can be quite revealing.
PAGE 59
EAT THAT FROG!
The main reason that you develop time management skills is so that
you can get everything that is really important in your work
completed so that you can free up more and more time to do the
things in your personal life that give you the greatest happiness and
satisfaction.
PAGE 60
EAT THAT FROG!
time” with the people you care about, doing the things that give you
the greatest amount of joy in life.
To keep your life in balance, you should resolve to work all the time
you work. When you go to work, put your head down and work the
whole time. Start a little earlier, stay a little later, and work a little
harder. Don’t waste time. Every minute that you spend in idle chit
chat with coworkers is time taken away from the work that you must
accomplish if you want to keep your job.
Even worse, time that you waste at work often has to be taken away
from the members of your family. You either have to stay late or take
work home and work in the evenings. By not working effectively and
efficiently during your workday, you create unnecessary stress and
you deprive the members of your family of the very best person you
can possibly be.
There is a story of a little girl who goes to her mother and asks,
“Mommy, why does daddy bring a briefcase full of work home each
night and never spends any time with the family?”
PAGE 61
EAT THAT FROG!
The little girl then asks, “If that’s the case, why don’t they put him in
a slower class?”
You need balance between your work and your personal life. You
need to set priorities at work and concentrate on your most valuable
tasks. At the same time, you must never lose sight of the fact that the
reason for working efficiently is so that you can enjoy a higher
quality of life at home with your family.
I ask them in return, “How often does a tight rope walker balance
when he is on the high wire?”
After a few seconds of thinking, they almost always say, “All the
time.”
PAGE 62
EAT THAT FROG!
I say, “That is the same situation with balance between family and
home life. You have to do it all the time. You never reach a point
where you have attained it perfectly. You have to work at it.”
Your goal should be to perform at your very best at work, to get the
very most done and enjoy the very highest level of rewards possible
for you in your career. Simultaneously, you must always remember
to “smell the flowers along the way.” Never lose sight of the real
reasons why you work as hard as you do, and why you are so
determined to accomplish the very most with the time that you
invest. The more time you spend face-to-face with the people you
love, the happier you will be.
PAGE 63
EAT THAT FROG!
CHAPTER 9
Prepare Thoroughly Before You Begin
One of the best ways for you to overcome procrastination and get
more things done faster is for you to have everything you need at
hand before you begin. When you are fully prepared, you are like a
cocked gun or an archer with an arrow pulled back taut in the bow.
You just need one small mental push to get started on your highest
value tasks.
Begin by clearing off your desk or workspace so that you only have
one task in front of you. If necessary, put everything on the floor or
on the table behind you. Gather all the information, reports, details,
papers, and work materials that you will require to complete the job.
Have them at hand so you can reach them without getting up or
moving.
PAGE 64
EAT THAT FROG!
Be sure that you have all writing materials, computer disks, access
codes, email addresses and everything else you need to start and
continue working until the job is done.
The most productive people take the time to create a work area
where they enjoy spending time. The cleaner and neater your work
area before you begin, the easier it is for you to get started and keep
going.
It is amazing how many books never get written, how many degrees
never get completed, how many life changing tasks never get started
because people fail to take the first step of preparing everything in
advance.
PAGE 65
EAT THAT FROG!
Los Angeles attracts people from all over America who dream of
writing a successful movie script and selling it to one of the studios.
They move to Los Angeles and work at low level jobs for years while
they dream of writing and selling a popular script.
Recently, the Los Angeles Times sent a reporter out onto Wilshire
Boulevard to interview passers by. When people came along, he
asked them one question: "How is your script coming?" Three out of
four passersby replied, "Almost done!"
The sad fact is that "almost done" probably meant "not yet started."
Don’t let this happen to you.
My personal rule is “get it 80% right and then correct it later.” Run it
up the flagpole and see if anyone salutes. Don’t expect perfection the
first time, or even the first few times. Be prepared to fail over and
over before you get it right.
PAGE 66
EAT THAT FROG!
The only way to overcome your fears is to “do the thing you fear,”
and as Emerson wrote, “the death of fear is certain.”
Wayne Gretsky, the great hockey player, once said, “You miss every
shot you don’t take.”
When you sit down, with everything in front of you, ready to go,
assume the body language of high performance. Sit up straight, sit
forward and away from the back of the chair. Carry yourself as
though you were an efficient, effective high performing personality.
Then, pick up the first item and say to yourself, "Let's get to work!"
and plunge in. And once you've started, keep going until the job is
finished.
PAGE 67
EAT THAT FROG!
PAGE 68
EAT THAT FROG!
CHAPTER 10
Take It One Oil Barrel at A Time
There is an old saying that, "By the yard it's hard; but inch by inch,
anything's a cinch!"
Many years ago, driving an old Land Rover, I crossed the heart of the
Sahara Desert, the Tenezerouft, deep in modern day Algeria. By that
time, the desert had been abandoned by the French for years and the
original refueling stations were empty and shuttered.
PAGE 69
EAT THAT FROG!
The desert was 500 miles across in a single stretch, without water,
food, a blade of grass or even a fly. It was totally flat, like a broad
yellow sand parking lot that stretched to the horizon in all directions.
More than 1300 people had perished in the crossing of that stretch of
the Sahara in previous years. Often drifting sands had obliterated the
track across the desert and the travelers had gotten lost in the night,
never to be found again alive.
To counter this lack of features in the terrain as you crossed that flat
wasteland, the French had marked the track with black, 55 gallon oil
drums, five kilometers apart, which was exactly the curvature of the
earth.
Because of this, wherever you were in the daytime, you could see two
oil barrels, the one you had just passed and the one five kilometers
ahead. And that was all you needed to stay on course.
All you had to do was to steer for the next oil barrel. As a result, we
were able to cross the biggest desert in the world by simply taking it
“one oil barrel at a time.”
In the same way, you can accomplish the biggest task in your life by
disciplining yourself to take it just one step at a time. Your job is to go
as far as you can see. You will then see far enough to go further.
PAGE 70
EAT THAT FROG!
To accomplish a great task, you must step out in faith and have
complete confidence that your next step will soon become clear to
you. Remember the wonderful advice, "Leap — and the net will
appear!"
2. Then take just one step immediately. Sometimes, all you need to do
to get started is to sit down and complete one item on the list. And
then do one more, and so on. You will be amazed at what you
eventually accomplish.
PAGE 71
EAT THAT FROG!
CHAPTER 11
Upgrade Your Key Skills
“The only certain means of success is to render more and better service than
is expected of you, no matter what your task may be.”
Og Mandino
One of the most helpful of all time management techniques is for you
to get better at your key tasks. Personal and professional
improvement is one of the best time savers there is. The better you
are at a key task, the more motivated you are to launch into it. The
PAGE 72
EAT THAT FROG!
better you are, the more energy and enthusiasm you have. When you
know that you can do a job well, you find it easier to overcome
procrastination and get the job done faster and better than under any
other circumstances.
PAGE 73
EAT THAT FROG!
The best news is that you can learn whatever skills you need to be
more productive and more effective. You can become a touch typist if
necessary. You can become proficient expert with a computer. You
can become a terrific negotiator or a super salesperson. You can learn
to speak in public. You can learn to write effectively and well. These
are all skills you can acquire, as soon as you decide to, and make
them a priority.
First, read in your field for at least one hour every day. Get up a little
earlier in the morning and read for 30-60 minutes in a book or
magazine that contains information that can help you to be more
effective and productive at what you do.
Second, take every course and seminar available on key skills that
can help you. Attend the conventions and business meetings of your
profession or occupation. Go to the sessions and workshops. Sit up
front and take notes. Purchase the audio recordings of the programs.
Dedicate yourself to becoming one of the most knowledgeable and
competent people in your field.
Third, listen to audio programs in your car. The average car owner
sits behind the wheel 500-1000 hours each year while driving from
place to place. Turn driving time into learning time. You can become
one of the smartest, most capable and highest paid people in your
field simply by listening to educational audio programs as you drive
around.
PAGE 74
EAT THAT FROG!
The more you learn and know, the more confident and motivated
you feel. You better you become, the more capable you will be of
doing even more in your field.
The more you learn, the more you can learn. Just as you can build
your physical muscles through physical exercise, you build your
mental muscles with mental exercises. And there is no limit to how
far or how fast you can advance except for the limits you place on
your own imagination.
2. Identify the key skills that can help you the most to achieve better
and faster results. Determine the core competencies that you will
need to have in the future to lead your field. Whatever they are, set a
goal, make a plan and begin developing and increasing your ability
in those areas. Decide to be the very best at what you do!
PAGE 75
EAT THAT FROG!
CHAPTER 12
Leverage Your Special Talents
“Do your work. Not just your work and no more, but a little more
for the lavishings sake – that little more that is worth all the rest.”
Dean Briggs
You are remarkable! You have special talents and abilities that make
you different from every other person who has ever lived. There are
frogs you can eat, or learn to eat, that can make you one of the most
important people in your business or organization.
There are certain things that you can do, or that you can learn to do,
that can make you extraordinarily valuable to yourself and to others.
Your job is to identify your special areas of uniqueness and then to
commit yourself to becoming very, very good in those areas.
You could lose everything you own - your house, your car, your job,
your bank account- but as long as you still had your earning ability,
you could make it all back and more besides.
PAGE 76
EAT THAT FROG!
You are designed in such a way that you will most enjoy doing the
very things that you have the ability to be the very best at. What is it
that you enjoy the most about your work? What kind of frogs do you
most enjoy eating? The very fact that you enjoy something means
that you probably have within yourself the capability to be excellent
in that area.
Successful people are invariably those who have taken the time to
identify what they do well and most enjoy. They know what they do
PAGE 77
EAT THAT FROG!
You should always focus your best energies and abilities on starting
and completing those key tasks where your unique talents and
abilities enable you to do it well and make a significant contribution.
You cannot do everything but you can do those few things in which
you excel, the few things that can really make a difference.
PAGE 78
EAT THAT FROG!
CHAPTER 13
Identify Your Key Constraints
Between where you are today, and any goal or objective that you
want to accomplish, there is one major constraint that must be
overcome before you can achieve that major goal. Your job is to
identify it clearly.
Ask yourself these questions: What is holding you back? What sets
the speed at which you achieve your goals? What determines how
fast you move from where you are to where you want to go? What
stops you or holds you back from eating the frogs that can really
make a difference? Why aren’t you at your goal already?
These are some of the most important questions you will ever ask
and answer achieving high levels of personal productivity and
effectiveness. Whatever you have to do, there is always a limiting
factor that determines how quickly and well you get it done. Your job
is to study the task and identify the limiting factor or constraint
within it. You must then focus all of your energies on alleviating that
single chokepoint.
PAGE 79
EAT THAT FROG!
In virtually every task, large or small, there is a single factor that sets
the speed at which you achieve the goal or complete the job. What is
it? Concentrate your mental energies on that one key area. This can be
the most productive use of your time and talents.
The accurate identification of the limiting factor in any process and the
focus on that factor can usually bring about more progress in a shorter
period of time than any other single activity.
PAGE 80
EAT THAT FROG!
The 80/20 Rule also applies to the constraints in your life and in your
work. What this means is that 80% of the constraints, the factors that
are holding you back from achieving your goals, are internal. They
are within yourself, within your own personal qualities, abilities,
habits, disciplines or competencies. Or they are contained within
your own company or organization.
Look into your company honestly. Look within your boss, your
coworkers and members of your staff to see if there is a key weakness
that is holding you or the company back, which is acting as a brake
on the achievement of your key goals.
PAGE 81
EAT THAT FROG!
In your own life, you must have the honesty to look deeply into
yourself for the limiting factor or limiting skill that sets the speed at
which you achieve your own personal goals.
Keep asking, "What sets the speed at which I get the results I want?"
The definition of the constraint determines the strategy that you use
to alleviate it. The failure to identify the correct constraint, or the
identification of the wrong constraint, can lead you off in the wrong
direction. You can end up solving the wrong problem.
They later found that the primary reason that their sales were down
was a mistake made by an accountant that had accidentally priced
their products too high relative to their competition in the
PAGE 82
EAT THAT FROG!
Often, starting off your day with the removal of a key bottleneck or
constraint fills you full of energy and personal power. It propels you
into following through and completing the job. And there is always
something. Often alleviating a key constraint or limiting factor is the
most important frog you could eat at that moment.
PAGE 83
EAT THAT FROG!
CHAPTER 14
Put the Pressure on Yourself
“The first requisite for success is to apply your physical and mental energies
to one problem incessantly without growing weary.”
Thomas Edison
The world is full of people who are waiting for someone to come
along and motivate them to be the kind of people they wish they
could be. The problem is that, "No one is coming to the rescue."
These people are waiting for a bus on a street where no busses pass.
As a result, if they don't take charge of their lives and put the
pressure on themselves, they can end up waiting forever. And that is
what most people do.
To reach your full potential, you must form the habit of putting the
pressure on yourself, and not waiting for someone else to come along
and do it for you. You must choose your own frogs and then make
yourself eat them in their order of importance.
See yourself as a role model for others. Raise the bar on yourself. The
standards you set for your own work and behavior should be higher
than anyone else could set for you.
PAGE 84
EAT THAT FROG!
Imagine each day that you have just received an emergency message
and that you will have to leave town tomorrow for a month. If you
had to leave town for a month, what would you absolutely make sure
that you got done before you left? Whatever your answer, go to work
on that task right now.
PAGE 85
EAT THAT FROG!
2. Write out every step of a major job or project before you begin.
Determine how many minutes and hours you will require to
complete each phase. Then race against your own clock. Beat your
own deadlines. Make it a game, and resolve to win!
PAGE 86
EAT THAT FROG!
CHAPTER 15
Maximize Your Personal Powers
“Gather in your resources, rally all your faculties, marshal all your energies,
focus all your capacities upon mastery of at least one field of endeavor.”
John Haggai
When you are fully rested, you can get two times, three times and
five times as much done as when you are tired or burned out.
Your body is like a machine that uses food, water and rest to generate
energy that you then use to accomplish important tasks in your life
and work.
The fact is that your productivity begins to decline after eight or nine
hours of work. For this reason, working long hours into the night,
although it is sometimes necessary, means that you are usually
producing less and less in more and more time.
PAGE 87
EAT THAT FROG!
The more tired you become, the worse will be the quality of your
work and the more mistakes you will make. At a certain point, like a
battery that is run down, you can reach “the wall” and simply be
unable to continue.
There are specific times during the day when you are at your best.
You need to identify these times and discipline yourself to use them
on your most important and challenging tasks.
Most people are at their best in the mornings, after a good night's
sleep. Some people are better in the afternoons. A few people are
most creative and productive in the evenings or late at night.
Sometimes the very best use of your time is to go home early and go
to bed and sleep for ten hours straight. This can completely recharge
you and enable you to get two or three times as much done the
following day, and of a far higher quality, than if you had continued
working long into the night.
PAGE 88
EAT THAT FROG!
One of the smartest things you can do is to turn off the television and
get to bed by ten o'clock each night during the week. Sometimes, one
extra hour of sleep per night can change your entire life.
Here is a rule for you. Take at least one full day off every week.
During this day, either Saturday or Sunday, you must absolutely
refuse to read, clear correspondence, catch up on things from the
office or do anything else that taxes your brain. Instead, you go to a
movie, exercise, spend time with your family, go for a walk or any
activity that allows your brain to completely recharge itself. It is true
that “a change is as good as a rest.”
Take regular vacations each year, both long weekends and one and
two-week breaks to rest and rejuvenate. You are always the most
productive after a restful weekend or a vacation.
PAGE 89
EAT THAT FROG!
The better you feel when you start work, the less you procrastinate
and the more eager you are to get the job done and get on with other
tasks. High energy levels are indispensable to higher levels of
productivity, more happiness and greater success in everything you
do.
PAGE 90
EAT THAT FROG!
PAGE 91
EAT THAT FROG!
CHAPTER 16
Motivate Yourself into Action
Your level of self-esteem, how much you like and respect yourself, is
central to your levels of motivation and persistence. You should talk
PAGE 92
EAT THAT FROG!
When people ask you how you are, always tell them, "I feel terrific!"
PAGE 93
EAT THAT FROG!
It turns out that optimists have three special behaviors, all learned
through practice and repetition. First, optimists look for the good in
every situation. No matter what goes wrong, they always look for
something good or beneficial. And not surprisingly, they always
seem to find it.
Third, optimists think and talk continually about their goals. They
think about what they want and how to get it, most of the time. They
think and talk about the future and where they are going rather than
the past and where they came from. They are always looking forward
rather than backward.
When you continually visualize your goals and ideals and talk to
yourself in a positive way, you feel more focused and energized. You
PAGE 94
EAT THAT FROG!
And the more positive and motivated you feel, the more eager you
are to get started and the more determined you are to keep going.
PAGE 95
EAT THAT FROG!
CHAPTER 17
Get Out Of the Technological Time Sinks
Bill Gross, Manager of more than 600 billion dollars in fixed income
funds and bonds, is famous for exercising regularly and meditating
PAGE 96
EAT THAT FROG!
For you to stay calm, clear headed and capable of performing at your
best, you need to detach on a regular basis from the technology and
communication devices that can overwhelm you if you are not
careful.
Then I realized that they were not praying at all. Each of them was
intensely focused on their Blackberries, sending and receiving email,
working their little keyboards like frantic teenagers playing a video
game. They were all lost to the world around them as they messaged
PAGE 97
EAT THAT FROG!
back and forth, some of them with other people in the same room.
They had fallen into a technological trap, a deep sink full of
information exchange in which they were drowning.
PAGE 98
EAT THAT FROG!
several hours each day. The more time he spent at his computer, the
fewer of his other important tasks he was able to get done. The stress
of these tasks, building up like an avalanche overhang, started to
affect his personality, his health and his sleeping habits.
Using the principles taught in Eat That Frog!, we taught him about
the 80/20 Rule and how it applies to emails. Fully 80% of the emails
that you receive are of no value, and should not even be opened.
They should be deleted immediately.
My client felt that there was no one who had the ability to sort out his
emails, more than 300 per day, and that he had to do it all himself, no
matter how much time it took. We encouraged him to sit down with
his secretary and go through his emails, showing her which ones
were important, which ones were unimportant and how to deal with
the most common questions and requests.
PAGE 99
EAT THAT FROG!
At our next meeting, he told me that he had tracked the time savings
of this simple exercise and calculated that he was now saving 23
hours per week of work that he could then spend eating his frogs,
and getting his most important tasks completed.
This simple exercise transformed his life, reduced his stress levels,
improved his health and energy and made him a much more relaxed
and positive person.
Here is a question for you: “How would your life change if you had
an extra 23 hours each week, with which to think, work, plan, talk
with key coworkers or even go for a walk with your spouse?”
Refuse to Be a Slave
For the first time in his email career, he took a deep breath, and
punched the “Delete All” button, erasing those 700 emails forever.
PAGE 100
EAT THAT FROG!
He then turned and got busy with the projects that were really
important to him and his company.
For you to be able to concentrate on those few things that make most
of the difference in your business or personal life, you must discipline
yourself to use technology as a servant, not a master. Technology is
there to help you, not to hinder you. The purpose of technology is to
make your life smoother and easier, not to create complexity,
confusion and stress.
One of the best rules in dealing with time, people and technology is
to just, “leave things off.” Resist the urge to start turning on
communication devices as soon as you wake up in the morning.
Leave the radio off. Leave the television off. Leave your cell phone
off. Leave your computer off until you have planned and organized
your day. Deliberately create zones of silence in your life where no
one and nothing can break through and reach you. Maintain your
“inner calm” by forcing yourself to stop on a regular basis and “listen
to the silence.”
PAGE 101
EAT THAT FROG!
Sometimes to get more done of higher value, you have to stop doing
things of lower value. Keep asking yourself, “What’s important here?”
What is important for you to accomplish at work? What is important
in your personal life? Of all the things that you could do, if you could
only do one or two of them, which ones would they be?
PAGE 102
EAT THAT FROG!
2. Resolve to take one full day off each week during which you do
not touch your computer, check your Blackberry or make any
attempt to keep in touch with the world of technology. At the end of
a day without continuous contact, except by voice, your mind will go
calm and clear, like water. By giving your mental batteries time to
recharge, free from the incessant interruptions of communication,
you will be more relaxed, aware and alert.
PAGE 103
EAT THAT FROG!
CHAPTER 18
Slice and Dice the Task
One technique that you can use to cut a big task down to size is the
"Salami slice" method of getting work done.
With this method, you lay out the task in detail and then resolve to
do just one slice of the job for the time being, like eating a roll of
salami, one slice at a time. Or like eating an elephant one bite at a
time.
Often, once you have started and completed a single part of the job,
you will feel like doing just one more "slice."
Soon, you will find yourself working through the job one part at a
time, and before you know it, the job will be completed.
PAGE 104
EAT THAT FROG!
This means that you actually feel happier and more powerful when
you start and complete a task of any kind. You satisfy a deep
subconscious need to bring finality to a job or project. This sense of
completion or closure motivates you to start into the next task or
project and then to persist toward final completion. This act of
completion triggers that release of endorphins in your brain that we
talked about earlier.
And the bigger the task you start and complete, the better and more
elated you feel. The bigger the frog you eat, the greater the surge of
personal power and energy you will experience.
When you start and finish a small piece of a task, you feel motivated
to start and finish another part, and then another, and so on. Each
small step forward energizes you. You son develop an inner drive
that motivates you to carry through to completion. This completion
gives you the great feeling of happiness and satisfaction that
accompanies any success.
PAGE 105
EAT THAT FROG!
Another technique you can use to get yourself going is called the
"Swiss cheese" method of working. You use this technique to get
yourself into gear by resolving to punch a hole into the task, like a
hole in a block of Swiss Cheese.
You Swiss cheese a task when you resolve to work for a specific time
period on a task. This may be as little as five or ten minutes, after
which you will stop and do something else. You will just take one
bite of your frog and then rest, or do something else.
The power of this method is similar to the salami slice method. Once
you start working, you develop a sense of forward momentum and a
feeling of accomplishment. You become energized and enthusiastic.
You feel yourself internally motivated and propelled to keep going
until the task is complete.
You should try the "Salami Slice" or the "Swiss cheese" method on
any task that seems overwhelming when you approach it for the first
time. You will be amazed at how helpful these techniques are in
overcoming procrastination.
PAGE 106
EAT THAT FROG!
PAGE 107
EAT THAT FROG!
CHAPTER 19
Create Large Chunks of Time
Many business executives set aside a specific time each day to call
customers directly to get feedback, or to return phone calls, or answer
correspondence.
Some people allocate specific 30-60 minute time periods each day for
exercise. Many people read in the great books 15 minutes each night
before retiring. In this way, over time, they eventually read dozens of
the best books ever written.
PAGE 108
EAT THAT FROG!
During this working time, you turn off the telephone, eliminate all
distractions and work non-stop. One of the best work habits of all is
for you to get up early and work at home in the morning for several
hours. You can get three times as much work done at home without
PAGE 109
EAT THAT FROG!
When you fly on business, you can create your office in the air by
planning your work thoroughly before you depart. When the plane
takes off, you can work non-stop for the entire flight. You will be
amazed at how much work you can go through when you work
steadily in an airplane, without interruptions.
Remember, the pyramids were built one block at a time. A great life
and a great career is built one task, and often, one part of a task, at a
time. Your job in time management is to deliberately and creatively
organize the concentrated time periods you need to get your key jobs
done well, and on schedule.
PAGE 110
EAT THAT FROG!
PAGE 111
EAT THAT FROG!
CHAPTER 20
Develop A Sense of Urgency
“Do not wait; the time will never be ‘just right.’ Start where you stand,
and work with whatever tools you may have at your command,
and better tools will be found as you go along.”
Napoleon Hill
Highly productive people take the time to think, plan and set
priorities. They then launch quickly and strongly toward their goals
and objectives. They work steadily, smoothly and continuously. As a
result, they seem to power through enormous amounts of work in the
same amount of time that the average person spends socializing,
wasting time and working on low value activities.
PAGE 112
EAT THAT FROG!
You feel elated and clear. Everything you do seems effortless and
accurate. You feel happy and energized. You experience a
tremendous sense of calm and increased personal effectiveness.
In the state of "flow," identified and talked about over the centuries,
you actually function on a higher plane of clarity, creativity and
competence. You are more sensitive and aware. Your insight and
intuition functions with incredible precision. You see the
interconnectedness of people and circumstances around you. You
often come up with brilliant ideas and insights that enable you to
move ahead even more rapidly.
One of the ways you can trigger this state of flow is by developing a
"sense of urgency.” This is an inner drive and desire to get on with
the job quickly and get it done fast. This inner drive is an impatience
that motivates you to get going and to keep going. A sense of
urgency feels very much like racing against yourself.
With this ingrained sense of urgency, you develop a "bias for action."
You take action rather than talking continually about what you are
going to do. You focus on specific steps you can take immediately.
PAGE 113
EAT THAT FROG!
You concentrate on the things you can do right now to get the results
you want and achieve the goals you desire.
Fast tempo seems to go hand in hand with all great success.
Developing this tempo requires that you start moving and keep
moving at a steady rate. The faster you move, the more impelled you
feel to do even more, even faster. You enter “the zone.”
The good news is that the faster you move, the more energy you have.
The faster you move, the more you get done and the more effective
you feel. The faster you move, the more experience you get and the
more you learn. The faster you move, the more competent and
capable you become at your work.
PAGE 114
EAT THAT FROG!
Do It Now!
One of the simplest and yet most powerful ways to get yourself
started is to repeat the words, "Do it now! Do it now! Do it now!"
over and over to yourself.
In the final analysis, nothing will help you more in your career than
for you to get the reputation for being the kind of person who gets
important work done quickly and well. This reputation will make
you one of the most valuable and respected people in your field.
PAGE 115
EAT THAT FROG!
CHAPTER 21
Single Handle Every Task
“And herein lies the secret of true power. Learn, by constant practice,
how to husband your resources, and concentrate them,
at any given moment, upon a given point.”
James Allen
Your ability to select your most important task, to begin it and then to
concentrate on it single mindedly until it is complete is the key to
high levels of performance and personal productivity.
Single handling requires that once you begin, you keep working at
the task, without diversion or distraction, until the job is 100%
complete. You keep urging yourself onward by repeating the words
"Back to work!" over and over whenever you are tempted to stop or
do something else.
PAGE 116
EAT THAT FROG!
It has been estimated that the tendency to start and stop a task, to
pick it up, put it down and come back to it can increase the time
necessary to complete the task by as much as 500%.
Each time you return to the task, you have to familiarize yourself
with where you were when you stopped and what you still have to
do. You have to overcome inertia and get yourself going again. You
have to develop momentum and get into a productive work rhythm.
But when you prepare thoroughly and then begin, refusing to stop or
turn aside until the job is done, you develop energy, enthusiasm and
motivation. You get better and better and more productive. You work
faster and more effectively.
The truth is that once you have decided on your number one task,
anything else that you do other than that is a relative waste of time.
Any other activity is just not as valuable or as important as this job,
based on your own priorities.
PAGE 117
EAT THAT FROG!
Each time you stop working however, you break this cycle and move
back up the curve to where every part of the task is more difficult
and time consuming.
Starting a high priority task and persisting with that task until it is
100% complete is the true test of your character, your willpower and
your resolve.
And the more you like and respect yourself, the easier it is for you to
discipline yourself to persist even more.
PAGE 118
EAT THAT FROG!
You feel stronger, more competent, confident and happier. You feel
more powerful and productive.
You eventually feel capable of setting and achieving any goal. You
become the master of your own destiny. You place yourself on an
ascending spiral of personal effectiveness on which your future is
absolutely guaranteed.
And the key to all of this is for you to determine the most valuable
and important thing you could possibly do at every single moment
and then, "Eat That Frog!"
PAGE 119
EAT THAT FROG!
CONCLUSION
Putting It All Together
1. Set the table: Decide exactly what you want. Clarity is essential.
Write out your goals and objectives before you begin;
PAGE 120
EAT THAT FROG!
8. The Law of Three: Identify the three things you do in your work
that account for 90% of your contribution and focus on getting
them done before anything else. You will then have more time for
your family and personal life;
10. Take it one oil barrel at a time: You can accomplish the biggest
and most complicated job if you just complete it one step at a time;
PAGE 121
EAT THAT FROG!
11. Upgrade your key skills: The more knowledgeable and skilled
you become at your key tasks, the faster you start them and the
sooner you get them done;
14. Put the pressure on yourself: Imagine that you have to leave
town for a month and work as if you had to get all your major
tasks completed before you left;
16. Motivate yourself into action: Be your own cheerleader. Look for
the good in every situation. Focus on the solution rather than the
problem. Always be optimistic and constructive;
PAGE 122
EAT THAT FROG!
18. Slice and dice the task: Break large, complex tasks down into bite
sized pieces and then just do one small part of the task to get
started;
19. Create large chunks of time: Organize your days around large
blocks of time where you can concentrate for extended periods on
your most important tasks;
21. Single handle every task: Set clear priorities, start immediately
on your most important task and then work without stopping
until the job is 100% complete. This is the real key to high
performance and maximum personal productivity.
PAGE 123