Charles Duhigg, Random House 2012
The science of habits is a fascinating subject, one that held Charles Duhigg, the Pulitzer Prize-winning business reporter with the New York Times, in a ten-year thrall and inspired his 2012 international bestseller The Power of Habits.
It is a book that promises much and delivers more.
After reading hundreds of scientific papers and interviewing many of the experts who wrote them; after observing organizational and societal behaviours (Parts Two and Three of the book are devoted to the Habits of Successful Organizations, and Habits of Societies); after tracking his own ‘cookie’ habit, Mr. Duhigg identified the ‘habit loop’ which is a cue; a routine; a reward.
Using his own afternoon cookie craving, he then designed a process of interruptive actions:
• isolate the cue;
• identify the routine;
• experiment with rewards.
(See flowcharts below)
To his surprise, the cookie was subterfuge; his real need or craving (a behaviour won’t become a habit without a craving), was to connect with colleagues. When the need was met, the cookie craving faded away.
“The specifics of diagnosing and changing the patterns in our lives differ from person to person and behavior to behavior,” Duhigg writes. “Giving up cigarettes is different than curbing overeating, which is different from changing how you communicate with your spouse, which is different from how you prioritize tasks at work.”
So, it seems we must look at our own habits, formulate our own solutions, and also, the author adds: “…believe our behaviour can change”.
Individuals, and Organizations and Societies all share the same underlying habit/routine formation and structure, and all can create new behaviours … if they focus on keystone habits. (The book defines a keystone habit as a habit that starts a process that over time, transforms everything.)
The power of a keystone habit is most clearly seen in the book’s second section: The Habits of Organizations. Chockfull of great narratives (E.g., How one woman’s bed-making habit with Febreeze prompted yearly earnings of $1 billion for P&G; or how a CEO’s seemingly cockeyed fixation on safety and fire exits rather than on profits, turned Alcoa into the third largest producer of aluminium in the world), this section is a true page-turner.
Though instructive and enjoyable, the book is 400 pages; so, if time is short, you can glean the essentials through either the two flowcharts below, or the link to a 30-minute summary ebook:
- Charles Duhigg’s flowcharts
How to Change A Habit
http://www.scribd.com/embeds/95350631/content?start_page=1&view_mode=scroll&access_key=key-2jii9exe0kukyag38cqy&show_recommendations=false
How to Create a Habit
http://www.scribd.com/embeds/95349960/content?start_page=1&view_mode=scroll&access_key=key-1fqiy246ropvrx5wghy6&show_recommendations=false - The Power of Habit in 30 Minutes: a Summary e-book