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⋙ PDF The Achievement Habit Stop Wishing Start Doing and Take Command of Your Life (Audible Audio Edition) Bernard Roth Sean Pratt HarperAudio Books

The Achievement Habit Stop Wishing Start Doing and Take Command of Your Life (Audible Audio Edition) Bernard Roth Sean Pratt HarperAudio Books



Download As PDF : The Achievement Habit Stop Wishing Start Doing and Take Command of Your Life (Audible Audio Edition) Bernard Roth Sean Pratt HarperAudio Books

Download PDF  The Achievement Habit Stop Wishing Start Doing and Take Command of Your Life (Audible Audio Edition) Bernard Roth Sean Pratt HarperAudio Books

Did you know that achievement can be learned? As Bernie Roth explains, achievement is a muscle. And once you learn how to flex it, you'll be able to meet life's challenges and reach your goals.

Based on a legendary course Roth has taught at Stanford University for several decades, The Achievement Habit employs the remarkable insights that stem from design thinking to help us realize the power we all have within to change our lives for the better. By ridding ourselves of issues that stand in the way of reaching our full potential, we gain the confidence finally to do things we've always wanted to do. Combining design thinking, problem solving, creativity, communication skills, and life adjustments, listeners will learn

  • Why trying and doing are two different things
  • Why using reasons (excuses), even legitimate ones, to explain one's behavior is self-defeating
  • How to change your self-image into one of a doer and achiever
  • How subtle language changes can resolve existential dilemmas and barriers to action
  • How to build resiliency by reinforcing what you do rather than what you accomplish
  • How to be open to learning from your own experience and from those around you

Our behavior and relationships can be transformed - if we choose to, we can be mindful and control our intentions to create habits that make our lives better. And with this thoughtful book as your guide, you can.


The Achievement Habit Stop Wishing Start Doing and Take Command of Your Life (Audible Audio Edition) Bernard Roth Sean Pratt HarperAudio Books

A Discerning Man's Review of Bernard Roth's "The Achievement Habit"

Short version; It loses a star for failing to meet the promise of the title -HARD. It loses another for filler stories that bury the nuggets and insights instead of supporting them/adding meaning to the reader. Still there's good stuff in there.

I have a tremendous amount of respect for the author and his work at the D School and Ideo. That said, I reviewed his book, not his person or his professional achievements. I'm sure many of his students, friends and fam are giving the 5 star reviews here to be supportive and they know the spirit and intent of the author. Having only the book, I give it 3 stars.

This book is a light read about design processes, buddhism disguised as mindfulness, personal mindset, problem-solving, and life. It isn't a cohesive, systematic, whole product designed to teach you how to cultivate or understand the habit of achievement. There are some good insights in a few chapters, but they're often buried under 3 feet of personal stories that carry more weight/meaning for the author than the reader.

The title of this book is a clickbait title and a betrayal to the reader; the original sin of any author/content creator. On the whole, 80% of the book doesn't seem to be focused or clearly tied to the title. It not only fails to meet the promise of the title, it fails to solidly offer a consolation prize, which is okay in life, but a waste of a good title in this case. All in all, this book reads more like a memoir and far and away from the promise of the title.

If you've never read a book, or a self help book, or a good book on experience design, then I'm sure this will impress you (because you'll want to validate your own achievement). If you're a regular reader, prepare for a 3 star read at best. I read every word (unlike many a reviewer). And, looking back at my highlights and asterisks in the margins, I could have saved quite a bit of time without losing much value in the process. My advice to those who read this: skim through the stories and focus on the concluding points after the diary entries.

I felt the book is light on self-development, light on mindfulness, light on habit development, light on design and light on experience design tools to truly help you establish a habit of achievement. Basically, The book has some great insights and activities; a few (less than expected design insights from the head of the design school at Stanford and Ideo guy). And what little it offers is not anchored to a central idea of cultivating a habit of achievement. I expected more, better than what's available on the shelves from the author, and I would have settled for content quality on par with what's on the shelves to give a 4-5 star review. This book doesn't meet that standard.

This book offers very little insight on human behavior, neuroscience, or psychology and seemed to operate on some outdated concepts. For example, it mentions left-right brain activity which has been thoroughly debunked (the brain really doesn't work that way). Scientific research isn't required for a great book, but if it is to be used, it should be up to date and accurate (otherwise it perpetuates faulty thinking).

I also found many of the self-help concepts to be dated, mundane, and unrefined. Many of them are still valid but some are just plain, bad advice. I was hoping for more pinpointed discernment, pragmatism, and systematic /gamified or well designed approach to building an achievement habit.

Some Good Things:
-Roth does a good job of explaining that you give things meaning, and imbue them with meaning.
-Roth emphasizes approaches to problem solving and exploration of the problem, prototyping solutions, and using a bit of design thinking (mostly in one chapter)
- He provides several methods of ideation and exploring obstacles, and framing the problem (too lightly I might add but its there).
- He advocates for personal responsibility and reframing language you use to ensure you recognize your choices and decisions.

As an Sr. Experience Designer, Marketing Technologist, and growth minded person, there are better books that deliver on the promise of their titles. If you're lured by the title of this book I recommend that you check out:
- "Essentialism" by Greg McKeown - Full of substance, pragmatic wisdom and activity.
- "The Buddha Walks Into a Bar..." by Lordo Rinzler
- "Game Storming" by Dave Gray
- "Hooked" by Nir Eyal
- "Experience Design" by Patrick Newbery - HARD READ BUT DEPTH AND SUBSTANCE GALORE!

Product details

  • Audible Audiobook
  • Listening Length 7 hours and 23 minutes
  • Program Type Audiobook
  • Version Unabridged
  • Publisher HarperAudio
  • Audible.com Release Date November 17, 2015
  • Whispersync for Voice Ready
  • Language English, English
  • ASIN B014VB7COA

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The Achievement Habit Stop Wishing Start Doing and Take Command of Your Life (Audible Audio Edition) Bernard Roth Sean Pratt HarperAudio Books Reviews


I kept waiting for The Achievement Habit to get better, but it never did. The first couple of chapters are pretty strong. I think they tricked me and I started thinking the author would start writing that way again. He never did.

The ideas and concepts and observations are all fine. It’s the book that’s not so good.

On page 241, Dr. Roth tells us what he wanted to do with the book.

"My goal with this book has been to give you tools and concepts that you can use to achieve a fuller, more fruitful, more satisfying life."

He gave me the tools and the concepts. I just wish he’d been a little more excited about the project and more engaged with it. I wish someone had told him about the difference between teaching in person and teaching in a book.

From the first couple of chapters, I think I know about what Dr. Roth is like in person. He’s wry, and ironic, and insightful, and he cares about the people he’s talking to. But after those chapters, the book kind of turned into “what Dr. Roth thinks about life.”

Most of the time I agree with his conclusions, but there’s no support for them besides Dr. Roth’s opinion. That’s fine, but it’s not proof. The result is that this book is like many other personal development books. That’s not what I was hoping for when I picked it up.

I had hoped that there would be ties to design thinking, since Dr. Roth teaches at Stanford’s d.school and is often cited as one of the “founders” of design thinking. Design thinking gets a lot of mention at the beginning of the book. Then it gets mentioned less and less, about every 10 to 20 pages. Then there’s no mention of it for a while, then a cluster of mentions, and then you don’t see it mentioned again until you get to the notes.

The book is titled The Achievement Habit, but I don’t think I ever figured out exactly what that is. It’s referred to, but never defined. To use a common phrase from the math textbooks of my youth, it may be “intuitively obvious to the most casual observer” but I didn’t get it.

I was hoping for the kind of insight that can happen when an intelligent, thoughtful person reflects on his or her life. I didn’t get that, either.

Dr. Roth shares a bunch of self-awareness exercises that remind me of the self-awareness workshops of the 1970s. They’re not bad. But you need someone to lead you. Otherwise all you have is a bunch of instructions on a page. That’s deadly in a book. There’s one exercise that runs from page 207 to page 208. It has 20 steps. That may be an effective exercise in a classroom or a workshop setting. It doesn’t work in a book.

There’s no passion in this book, either. It’s written like a lecture that Dr. Roth has given many, many, many, many times before. There are things that might work in person when he’s present to adjust the presentation and apply a bit of humor. Lectures are boring in person. They’re worse in a book. Here's an example of what I mean by "written like a lecture." It's from page 196

"One of the social functions of families and the other communities to which we belong is to constrain our behavior. Normally these social constraints serve a valid societal function. Yet they can also have a big downside unless we are willing to confront and— if appropriate— discard them in a productive manner. If we realize we have a unique persona and a history different from that of our teachers and parents, we can end up being creators of a new synthesis that honors our influences yet is also a true expression of our very being. It is important that we look at our life and work not only from the point of view of its content but also from the question of what our actual intentions are."

Bottom line, the content is good but the book is horrid.

There’s a lot of good advice here. There’s a lot of wisdom. But there’s not much passion and there’s not much thinking about how the ideas that may work in the classroom translate into a book. And that’s why The Achievement Habit is not worth your money or your time.
This was an enjoyable book, but not really so much about how to "Stop Wishing, Start Doing..." It's more a memoir on how Professor Roth created a teaching environment that results in students whose work in the world is informed by a spirit of innovation and creativity. But even in terms of that theme, the examples are very limited, both in number and in depth. Overall, I found the book enjoyable but unsatisfying - This is presented as a "how-to" book, and I kept finding myself waiting for a more in-depth exploration of the subject - which never occurred.
A Discerning Man's Review of Bernard Roth's "The Achievement Habit"

Short version; It loses a star for failing to meet the promise of the title -HARD. It loses another for filler stories that bury the nuggets and insights instead of supporting them/adding meaning to the reader. Still there's good stuff in there.

I have a tremendous amount of respect for the author and his work at the D School and Ideo. That said, I reviewed his book, not his person or his professional achievements. I'm sure many of his students, friends and fam are giving the 5 star reviews here to be supportive and they know the spirit and intent of the author. Having only the book, I give it 3 stars.

This book is a light read about design processes, buddhism disguised as mindfulness, personal mindset, problem-solving, and life. It isn't a cohesive, systematic, whole product designed to teach you how to cultivate or understand the habit of achievement. There are some good insights in a few chapters, but they're often buried under 3 feet of personal stories that carry more weight/meaning for the author than the reader.

The title of this book is a clickbait title and a betrayal to the reader; the original sin of any author/content creator. On the whole, 80% of the book doesn't seem to be focused or clearly tied to the title. It not only fails to meet the promise of the title, it fails to solidly offer a consolation prize, which is okay in life, but a waste of a good title in this case. All in all, this book reads more like a memoir and far and away from the promise of the title.

If you've never read a book, or a self help book, or a good book on experience design, then I'm sure this will impress you (because you'll want to validate your own achievement). If you're a regular reader, prepare for a 3 star read at best. I read every word (unlike many a reviewer). And, looking back at my highlights and asterisks in the margins, I could have saved quite a bit of time without losing much value in the process. My advice to those who read this skim through the stories and focus on the concluding points after the diary entries.

I felt the book is light on self-development, light on mindfulness, light on habit development, light on design and light on experience design tools to truly help you establish a habit of achievement. Basically, The book has some great insights and activities; a few (less than expected design insights from the head of the design school at Stanford and Ideo guy). And what little it offers is not anchored to a central idea of cultivating a habit of achievement. I expected more, better than what's available on the shelves from the author, and I would have settled for content quality on par with what's on the shelves to give a 4-5 star review. This book doesn't meet that standard.

This book offers very little insight on human behavior, neuroscience, or psychology and seemed to operate on some outdated concepts. For example, it mentions left-right brain activity which has been thoroughly debunked (the brain really doesn't work that way). Scientific research isn't required for a great book, but if it is to be used, it should be up to date and accurate (otherwise it perpetuates faulty thinking).

I also found many of the self-help concepts to be dated, mundane, and unrefined. Many of them are still valid but some are just plain, bad advice. I was hoping for more pinpointed discernment, pragmatism, and systematic /gamified or well designed approach to building an achievement habit.

Some Good Things
-Roth does a good job of explaining that you give things meaning, and imbue them with meaning.
-Roth emphasizes approaches to problem solving and exploration of the problem, prototyping solutions, and using a bit of design thinking (mostly in one chapter)
- He provides several methods of ideation and exploring obstacles, and framing the problem (too lightly I might add but its there).
- He advocates for personal responsibility and reframing language you use to ensure you recognize your choices and decisions.

As an Sr. Experience Designer, Marketing Technologist, and growth minded person, there are better books that deliver on the promise of their titles. If you're lured by the title of this book I recommend that you check out
- "Essentialism" by Greg McKeown - Full of substance, pragmatic wisdom and activity.
- "The Buddha Walks Into a Bar..." by Lordo Rinzler
- "Game Storming" by Dave Gray
- "Hooked" by Nir Eyal
- "Experience Design" by Patrick Newbery - HARD READ BUT DEPTH AND SUBSTANCE GALORE!
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