Reviewing Covey’s 4 Quadrants

by Bruce on December 4, 2007

Today we will talk about today is Covey’s Four Quadrants, which says that the things we do in life can be organized into 4 quadrants:

Coveys Four Quadrants

When I first encountered this, about 20 years ago, it was exactly what I needed. I was living almost exclusively in the Quadrants 1 and 3, and felt stretched to the limit. Oh I was “doing okay.” But, I did not feel any sense of peace and contentment at all. And, frankly, I had begun to feel like I was not in control of my life. I had not formally come to that conclusion, but there was a sense of it swimming around in my mind.

But after reading Covey’s The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People, I began implementing what he taught and I started trying to live out of Quadrant 2.

Making the move to living out of Quadrant 2 is one of the most valuable things I have ever done. And, it really was not hard:

  • I started by writing all of the Quadrant 1 and 3 activities that I was routinely engaged in
  • For each of these, I asked “what can I do to prevent this activity from reoccurring or from it having such an urgency?”
  • Asking this question helped me identify Quadrant 2 activities I should be doing. Once I identified them, I began scheduling time to implement them.
  • For each Q2 activity I scheduled, I stuck with the schedule. I treated each one just like a real appointment that I had to keep.

It did not take long before I was thinking in Q2, defining new activities that could prevent additional crises that could easily have happened had I not “awakened.”

In fact, I found Covey’s entire book to be helpful, and consider it to be one of the most valuable books I have ever read. A lot of people do not like it because they think it is “preachy.” I really did not look at it that way, though, perhaps because I needed some preaching.

I needed someone to tell me how stupid it is to climb the ladder of success only to find it is leaning against the wrong wall. I needed to be reminded that my family matters far more than my work. Oh of course I would have told you they did, but I was not spending the time with them I should have been spending. I was focusing on “earning the bacon,” thinking that doing so was the way I could help my family.

Covey woke me up, and that is why, even today, I appreciate the Covey philosophies more than I do the Getting Things Done philosophies. Actually I have found that I can integrate the two systems and get the best from both. I encourage you to see if you can do this, too.

Finally, you may be interested in knowing why I decided it was time to review Covey’s 4 Quadrants: I personally needed the review, and thought that some of you may also benefit from it. I have been retired almost a year now, and had drifted away from using the 4 Quadrants. Consequently, I have been drifting toward dwelling in Quadrant 4, of all despicable “places” to dwell. It is incredibly easy for a retired person to do this, and I am working on getting myself back into Q2.

By the way, a larger version of the 4 Quadrants picture is available here, in case you want to print it out for reference.

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{ 5 comments… read them below or add one }

1 twmiller 12.05.07 at 10:54 am

Bruce –

Thank you for the reminder/review. Sometimes we need to review the basics, especially when there are drastic changes in our personal life. That reminds me, I should re-read ‘Who moved my cheese’

2 Bruce 12.05.07 at 11:02 am

Thanks twmiller!

Believe it or not, I have never read Who Moved My Cheese … it was only recently that I read Tuesdays With Morrie. Sounds like it’s time for me to pay another visit to Barnes & Noble.

BTW, just got a membership renewal notice from them, and it said I had saved $92 in 2007 with them … guess that means I spent upwards of $1,000 with them this year. So, I am trying to slow down on my reading, because that is too much for a retired old man to spend on books (and it doesn’t count my Amazon purchases). But Who Moved My Cheese is a classic and I should read it.

3 Miscellaneous Organizational Tips | Keener Living 12.08.07 at 10:40 am

[...] time when she probably thought of herself as an item to be worked into my schedule. Fortunately, I came around, but, sadly, a lot of people still have some learning to do in this area. Probably a lot of us need [...]

4 Tag Tasks with GTD Contexts AND Covey Roles | Keener Living 12.12.07 at 4:00 am

[...] clearly it is time for me to address these imbalances. And, as I noted in my recent post on Covey’s 4 Quadrants, it is time for me to get back into Quadrant [...]

5 max 04.17.08 at 4:39 am

Don’t read “Who Moved My Cheese”! It is really bad. I definitly don’t think it is a classic, and if it is, I hope not for long.

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