Stephen Covey, '7 Habits' author, dies at 79
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Stephen R. Covey, a former Brigham Young University business professor who blended personal self-help and management theory in a massive best-seller, 鈥淭he 7 Habits of Highly Effective People,鈥 died Monday at a hospital in Idaho Falls, Idaho. He was 79.
The cause was complications from injuries sustained in a bicycle accident, said Debra Lund, a spokeswoman for the Utah-based FranklinCovey leadership training and consulting company he co-founded.
In April, Covey lost control of his bike while riding down a hill in Provo, Utah. He was hospitalized for two months with a head injury, cracked ribs and a partly collapsed lung but 鈥渘ever fully recovered,鈥 Lund said Monday.
Covey became a household name when 鈥淭he 7 Habits of Highly Effective People鈥 was published in 1989. On best-seller lists for four years, it has sold in excess of 20 million copies in 40 languages and spawned a multimillion-dollar business empire that markets audiotapes, training seminars and organizing aids aimed at improving personal productivity and professional success.
鈥淗is timing was perfect. He really caught the wave ... as people were becoming increasingly fascinated with leadership. He addressed ordinary people鈥檚 desire to succeed through leadership and management,鈥 said Barbara Kellerman, a lecturer on leadership at the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University.
Covey鈥檚 clients included three-quarters of Fortune 500 companies and scores of schools and government entities. He also trained three dozen heads of state, including the presidents of Colombia and South Korea and their cabinets. Bill Clinton and Newt Gingrich were among his fans.
Part Peter Drucker and part Norman Vincent Peale, Covey summed up his philosophy in seven 鈥渦nchanging principles鈥 or habits that emphasize traits such as taking personal responsibility (鈥淏e proactive鈥), having a road map or mission (鈥淏egin with the end in mind鈥) and defining one鈥檚 priorities (鈥淧ut first things first鈥). His lectures were peppered with terms such as 鈥渟ynergy鈥 and 鈥減aradigm shift,鈥 but he also urged businesses to consider how employees feel.
鈥淐oveyism is total quality management for the character, re-engineering for the soul 鈥 a tempting product in an age when the organizational versions of these disciplines have often pushed employee morale to rock bottom,鈥 the Economist wrote in 1996.
鈥淲e believe that organizational behavior is individual behavior collectivized,鈥 Covey told Fortune magazine in 1994.
Covey said the idea for 鈥7 Habits鈥 came partly from Drucker, the management guru who claimed that 鈥渆ffectiveness is a habit.鈥 He agreed with his critics that his principles were gleaned from many sources, including the major world religions and classic psychology and philosophy. Some critics said Covey鈥檚 Mormon beliefs were a particularly strong influence.
Born in Salt Lake City on Oct. 24, 1932, he grew up on a farm just outside town. During his teens he developed a bone condition that forced him to give up sports and focus on academics. He often credited his parents with instilling a positive attitude in him 鈥 especially his mother, who would stand over his bed and tell him, 鈥淵ou can do anything you want.鈥
At 16 he entered the University of Utah, earning a degree in business administration in 1952. Five years later he received an MBA from Harvard.
Covey went on Mormon missions in England and Ireland. Part of his work involved training provincial heads of the church across Britain, an experience that altered his parents鈥 plans for him to take over the family hotel business. 鈥淚 got so turned on by the idea of training leaders that it became my whole life鈥檚 mission,鈥 he told the Ottawa Citizen in 2004.
After he returned to Salt Lake City, he worked as an assistant to the president of Brigham Young University. In 1969 he began studying for a doctorate in business and education, writing his dissertation on American success literature since 1776. He earned his doctorate in 1976.
Covey is survived by his wife of 55 years, Sandra; daughters Cynthia Haller, Maria Cole, Catherine Sagers, Colleen Brown and Jenny Pitt; sons Stephen, Sean, David and Joshua; two sisters; a brother; 52 grandchildren; and six great-grandchildren.
Covey taught at Brigham Young until 1983, when he left to establish the Covey Leadership Center in Provo. In 1997 the center merged with rival Franklin Quest to form FranklinCovey.
He wrote several other best-selling books, including 鈥淭he 7 Habits of Highly Effective Families鈥 (1997). In a chapter on family rituals, he gave an example of what happened when he spent too long on a business call.
As the minutes ticked by, one of his sons grew impatient and started spreading peanut butter on Covey鈥檚 bald head. Covey stayed on the phone, so his son added a layer of jam and a piece of bread. Covey kept calm, which enabled him to continue conducting business while indulging his son. The lesson, Covey said, was Habit No. 4: 鈥淭hink win-win.鈥