Adapted from the New York Times Bestselling Authors Sean Covey, Chris McChesney and Jim Huling, from their book “The 4 Disciplines of Execution.” (Please note, I added a discipline).
The authors set to ask the question, “why do most people’s best ideas rarely come to reality?” Two things you can do to influence your outcomes are strategy and execution. For the student, your goal is to get into a “great, best fit” college. But, how is that accomplished? Awesome grades and scores help. But, what is the secret to being competitive when applying to Harvard or one of your other top choice colleges? According to Apple Founder Steve Jobs, “great ideas without polished execution are worthless.” Let’s start there.
The purpose of this blog is to explain the primary obstacle to execution and describe several steps to turn your great ideas into reality. You commit to getting A’s, decide to serve on the student council and excel in your favorite sport, and possibly start a non-profit. You soon realize that this is not as easy as it seems. The authors describe the main obstacle to execution. They call it “the Whirlwind,” non-priorities that seem urgent that overwhelm your more important but less urgent priorities. The Whirlwind may include social media, a friend’s birthday party or the family project to clean the basement. What you need is a system of execution to withstand the “Whirlwind.”