Smart Change: Break Bad Habits & Build Success Habits - Self-Improvement Book for Personal Growth & Career Development
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DESCRIPTION
An insightful guide that shows how habits of behavior are formed, and how we can transform bad habits into positive behaviors in ourselves and others.Smart Change explores the psychological mechanisms that form and maintain habits in individuals and groups and offers real, accessible and actionable advice for changing habits. In an engaging narrative, Markman covers a wide range of habits, from individual behaviors like eating better and exercising regularly to work-related behaviors such as learning effectively and influencing customers’ purchases. He proposes that there are five effective tools to help individuals change behavior and to help people influence the habits of the people around 1. Tame the “Go” Identify the triggers of habits, replace old behaviors with new ones and generate specific plans to deal with obstacles.2. Harness the “Stop” Learn to deal with stress and other factors that hinder the development of new and positive habits.3. Optimize your goals. Determine the course of behavior change and how to successfully incorporate those changes for the long term.4. Manage your Change your surroundings to dramatically reduce poor behavior and habits.5. Engage your To affect other people’s behavior, understand the shared culture that creates a mutual dependency, and allows neighbors and colleagues to have a profound positive influence on the behavior of other members of their community.
REVIEWS
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4.5
I bought the audio book first, then the hard copy. This book is the right balance between "how" the brain works and "how to" make the changes. There is a similar best selling book about The Power of Habits which to me spent too much time on the "how" and not enough on the "how to." Marksman makes no bones about the reality that change is hard, but this is the first book I've read that offers such clear, no-nonsense information necessary to make those hard changes. I'm not completely where I want to be yet, but not only have I made more strides in the last few months than I have before, but some of these changes feel like a part of me already, as opposed to "something I'm trying to do." The investment of time is a bigger issue than the monetary investment when it comes to books like this. This one is well worth the time.