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  • Great at Work: The Hidden Habits of Top Performers
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4.6 out of 5 stars
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Great at Work: The Hidden Habits of Top Performers

Great at Work: The Hidden Habits of Top Performers

byMorten T. Hansen
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From Canada

icemanbob
5.0 out of 5 stars Fantastic addition to the management library
Reviewed in Canada on August 26, 2018
Verified Purchase
I'm not much of a reader but I was having trouble with my career thinking and being too busy all the time without getting much done. I was recommended many of the typical consulting books (some of which are indeed good), but most I felt were superficial. Then someone mentioned Greg McKeown's 'essentialism' which I read and absolutely loved.

On a podcast, Greg mentioned this book recently and especially emphasized the "do less, then obsess" principle from 'Great at Work' which I also love.

In short, this book has been an equal, to me, in terms of potential for self-improvement. The way I see it, perhaps selfishly, is that I need to 'fix' myself before I can really improve all of my work practises. This books treatment - through a scientific and rigorous manner - of self-improvement is a refreshingly new take on many old paradigms that are misdirected or simply not true.

As a consultant myself, I'm certain that following these principles will get me that much farther.

To close, one of my favourite chapters deals with passion. I've generally lacked passion for anything for years and it has been a major stumbling block for me in my career. I was skeptical of this chapter, but as I progressed through everything there really holds true for me. Including the fact that I don't need to be passionate about a topic or a particular field in order to be passionate about what I do. For example I can be passionate about making other's lives easier and that's something you can do in any job.

I'd highly recommend this book to any working professional, but at the same time I want to keep it a secret otherwise I feel like the bar might go up and I'll be that much farther behind!

5 stars
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Robert Morris
HALL OF FAME
5.0 out of 5 stars How and why "seven practices upend conventional thinking about how you should work"
Reviewed in Canada on January 30, 2018
In this his latest and most valuable book, Morten Hansen shares what he and his colleagues learned from a five year research study whose primary purpose was to determine how to produce great work. (I highly recommend checking out the appendix -- Pages 215-247) -- in which there is a complete explanation of what was done and how it was done.) According to Hansen, "In the end, we discovered that 'work smart' practices seemed to explain a substantial portion of performance."

The results were not what the Hansen team expected. "These seven practices upend conventional thinking about how you should work." He devotes a separate chapter to each work-smart practice, noting that -- together --they complement the seven habits that Stephen Covey has previously associated with peak performers.

"To test our framework of the seven work-smart practices, my team and I modified our survey and administered it to 5,000 managers and employees across a wide range of jobs and industries in corporate America...We ran our 5,000-person data set through a rigorous statistical method called regression analysis."

The specific work-smart practices are best revealed within this book's narrative, in context, and each is worthy of rigorous consideration because the global marketplace today is more volatile, more uncertain, more complex, and more ambiguous than at any prior time that I remember. Surely the need for top performers who do less, work better, and achieve more is greater now than at any prior time that anyone can recall.

Years ago, in Little Bets: How Breakthrough Ideas Emerge from Small Discoveries, Peter Sims explains that his book's proposition is based on an experimental approach that involves a lot of little bets and certain creative methods to identify possibilities and build up to great outcomes eventually, after frequent failures. Actually, experimental innovation has no failures; rather, there are initiatives that have not as yet succeeded, each of which is a precious learning opportunity. "At the core of this experimental approach, little bets are concrete actions taken to discover, test, and develop ideas that are achievable and affordable."

I was reminded of those remarks when I came upon this passage in Morten Hansen's Epilogue: "Our discussion of small steps returns us to a major theme in this book: the potential we all have to become not just good at work, but great...That means that anyone can become a top performer -- you don't have to work crazy hours, be a genius, or be unusually lucky. You can become much better over time at working smart. Get started with small steps and keep at it, and some day you can win theIr gold medal in your line of work -- and have a great life, too."

These are among the passages of greatest interest to me:

o Five Ways to Create Value (Page 55)
o Basic Steps in a Learning Loop (70-73)
o What Hurdles at Work Prevent You from Looping? (85)
o The Purpose Pyramid (105-106)
o Make Others Upset...and Excited (123-124)
o Seek Diversity, Not Just Talent (149-150)
o Evaluating Collaboration Opportunities, Large and Small (176-178)
o How Do You Prevent Burning Out? (199-201)

Reminder: Be sure to check out the Research Appendix (215-247)

This book can be of incalculable value to supervisors as well as to direct reports entrusted to their care. I think it is also a "must read" for others who are engaged in collaborative initiatives, especially when the objective is to achieve breakthrough results. Finally, as Morten Hansen suggests, the material can help to accelerate personal growth as well as professional development.

In this brief commentary, I have indicated why I think so highly of Morten Hansen's latest book. Having read it and then re-read it twice, I believe it is his most valuable book thus far, one that will have wider and deeper impact than any of his previous works.

That said, if you share my high regard for Great at Work, I also strongly recommend an earlier work of his, Collaboration: How Leaders Avoid the Traps, Build Common Ground, and Reap Big Results (2009), as well as Great by Choice: Uncertainty, Chaos, and Luck -- Why Some Thrive Despite Them All (2011), a "classic" he co-authored with Jim Collins.
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From other countries

Denise L
2.0 out of 5 stars I gave up halfway
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on August 8, 2018
Verified Purchase
The author falls into the trap of making sweeping statements simply because "the data said so". The book suffers from the so-called halo effect. As a result it was intellectually unstimulating because it failed to consider "the other side".
9 people found this helpful
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Janinah
5.0 out of 5 stars A must read for anyone wanting to work smarter not harder.
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on April 7, 2018
Verified Purchase
Only started reading this book a few hours ago and already I'm on page 68! It's a great book with lots of valuable tips as to how to perform better based on the author's 5 year study. Information is easy to understand as the study has been condensed down and real life examples are given to back up the authors findings - A must read for anyone looking to work smarter not harder regardless of your role.
5 people found this helpful
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Paul
5.0 out of 5 stars One of the most useful books on productivity
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on February 5, 2021
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Hansen’s 7 practices are a God-send and a game changer for me. The practices can be implemented immediately. The examples are illuminating and the book is easy to read.
One person found this helpful
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Tom
3.0 out of 5 stars Good
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on April 8, 2018
Verified Purchase
This book is not anything I can get excited about but it is very useful and contains some great stories and tips to improve yourself. It is much easier to read than the coveted 7 habits of highly effective people but just lacks that little something special that most fans of self improvement books seek.
3 people found this helpful
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Dave Woodall
5.0 out of 5 stars Great advice
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on September 6, 2018
Verified Purchase
Some excellent advice backed up by a comprehensive study. The text is surprisingly conversational and easy to pick up.
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UKTIMANDJO
5.0 out of 5 stars My mentor recommended this. Middle manangement wanting to progress will find ...
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on July 5, 2018
Verified Purchase
My mentor recommended this. Middle manangement wanting to progress will find this really useful. Some good tips.
2 people found this helpful
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Letizia M.
5.0 out of 5 stars Lots of tips
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on November 13, 2020
Verified Purchase
Very clear , easy to follow and lots of tips... I am really loving it!
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Ian Berry
TOP 500 REVIEWER
3.0 out of 5 stars Good yet not great
Reviewed in Australia on July 14, 2018
Verified Purchase
The author says this book is a compliment to 'The seven habits of highly effective people' and I would agree yet my context would be that I regard Covey's 8th habit as a better book than the 7 habits.

The four mastering your own work practices of this book are great and include references to 'deliberate practice' yet not 'deep work' or other works of substance in this genre.

The three mastering working with others I found confusing as descriptors and I had to work hard to get to the substance.

About 45% of this book is research appendix, bibliography etc etc.

This book for me is too perscriptive, I prefer more how I could apply proven principles e.g deliberate practice, radical candor, essentialism, the last two of which are not referenced in the book
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